107th ASIL Annual Meeting

International Law in a Multipolar World

April 3-6, 2013 The Marriott Renaissance Hotel Washington, DC

To fi nd out more about the American Society of International Law or to join, visit www.asil.org. SIL is a nonprofi t, nonpartisan, educational membership organization founded in 1906 and chartered by Congress in 1950. Th e mission of the AAmerican Society of International Law is to foster the study of international law and to promote the establishment and maintenance of international relations on the basis of law and justice. ASIL holds Category II Consultative Status to the Economic and Social Council of the and is a constituent society of the American Council of Learned Societies.

Th e Society’s 4,000 members from more than 100 nations include attorneys, academics, corporate counsel, judges, representatives of governments and nongovernmental organizations, international civil servants, students and others interested in international law. Th rough our meetings, publications, information services and outreach programs, ASIL advances international law scholarship and education for international law professionals as well as for broader policy-making audiences and the public.

2223 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20008 Phone +1 202-939-6000 Fax +1 202-797-7133 www.asil.org

©2013 ASIL Annual Meeting Dear Colleague, During the Cold War, international relations and international law were dominated by a struggle for global dominance between the United States and the Soviet Union. Th e resulting clashes reverberated in legal issues relating to the functioning of the United Nations, the use of force, nuclear nonproliferation, human rights, etc. Th e third world countries, caught in the middle, repeatedly made claims for reform and initiated rule-making initiatives, but with limited results. Aft er the end of the Cold War, the United States, its Western allies, and their shared economic and geopolitical interests remained largely unchallenged in the international arena.

While the United States is arguably still the only superpower and the European Union remains the largest economy, the world is undergoing major change. China, India, Russia, Brazil, and other States in Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa are increasingly active voices in international institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization, and have started questioning the dominance of the West in these organizations. Th ese countries are forming alliances in the major international organizations and establishing new institutions to assert their authority and pursue their interests. In short, a new set of actors is moving onto center stage. In the process, these actors are seeking to reshape international rules governing trade and fi nance, military force, the environment, and beyond.

How will the international legal order evolve to refl ect this new multipolar world? Will the international legal order undergo signifi cant change as the global balance of power and infl uence shift s? Are there barriers preventing these actors from having a full voice in the international legal order? Can the major international organizations adapt adequately? Will new organizations emerge? How will human rights law, environmental law, trade law, the law of armed confl ict, the law of the use of force, and other bodies of law refl ect the interests and infl uence of a new set of actors? Are trends emerging already? How should the legal profession and non- legal experts—in the fi elds of technology, fi nance, trade, climate science, arms confl ict, and arms control— respond?

During the 2013 ASIL Annual Meeting we will address these questions and discuss the evolution of international law in a multipolar world.

Co-Chairs, Program Committee ASIL 107th Annual Meeting

Stanimir Alexandrov Laurence Boisson Kal Raustiala de Chazournes

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 1

107th ASIL Annual Meeting Table of Contents

4 ...... Sponsors, Partners and Exhibitors 6 ...... Exhibitor Floor Plan 7 ...... Program at a Glance 11 ...... Annual Meeting Program Committee 12 ...... About ASIL 20 ...... General Conference Information 22 ...... Speakers 27 ...... Main Program Agenda 67 ...... Program by Track 69 ...... Meeting Floor Plan 2013 ASIL Sponsors & Partners

ASIL would like to thank the following sponsors of the 107th Annual Meeting – ANNUAL MEETING SPECIAL EVENT SPONSORS –

American University, Washington College of Law American Bar Association Section of International Law The City of The Hague Institute for Global Justice International Studies Association International Law Students Association The Royal Embassy

– 2013 LAW FIRM SPONSORS – – 2013 PUBLISHING PARTNERS –

Leadership Circle Platinum:

Gold: Oxford University Press Bronze: Edward Elgar Publishing Hart Publishing William S. Hein & Company

President’s Circle Sullivan & Cromwell Counselors Covington & Burling King & Spalding Sidley Austin Steptoe & Johnson

4 – 2012-2013 ACADEMIC PARTNERS –

American University Washington College of Law Arizona State University, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law Boston University School of Law Case Western Reserve University School of Law Chapman University School of Law Columbia University School of Law Duke Law School Emory University School of Law Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tuft s George Washington University Law School Georgetown University Law Center Graduate Institute of Geneva Indiana University Maurer School of Law Loyola Law School Los Angeles Loyola University Chicago School of Law New York University School of Law Northeastern University School of Law Notre Dame Law School Penn State University Dickinson School of Law Pepperdine University School of Law Santa Clara University School of Law Southwestern Law School St. John’s University School of Law St. Th omas University School of Law Stanford University Law School Stetson University College of Law SUNY Buff alo Law School Sydney Law School Syracuse University College of Law Th omas Jeff erson School of Law University of California, Berkeley School of Law University of California, Davis School of Law University of Denver Sturm College of Law University of Geneva School of Law University of Georgia School of Law University of Iowa College of Law University of Miami School of Law University of Minnesota Law School University of Pittsburgh School of Law University of Richmond School of Law University of San Francisco School of Law University of Wisconsin Law School USC Gould School of Law Vanderbilt University Law School Vermont Law School Washington & Lee University School of Law Willamette University College of Law Yale Law School

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 5 Exhibitor Floor Plan

Kiosk

1 American Society of International Law 2-3 Law School Academic Program Information 4-7 Oxford Press 8-11 Brill 12-13 Edward Elgar 14 Springer 15 Intersentia 16 Eleven International 17-20 Cambridge Press 21 Routledge 22 Editions Pedone 23 IIE 24 American Bar Association International Law Section 25 Hein Publishing 26 Hart Publishing 27 Ashgate Publishing

6 Program at a Glance

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3

START END CLE TIME TIME SESSION ROOM ELIGIBILITY International Environmental Law Interest Group Business 7:00 AM 8:30 AM Meeting Room 2 N/A 7:00 AM 9:00 AM ITA Breakfast Mt. Vernon B N/A 9:00 AM 12:00 PM 10th ITA-ASIL Conference Central Salon N/A 9:00 AM 11:00 AM ASIL Executive Council Orientation Meeting North Salon N/A 11:30 AM 3:30 PM ASIL Executive Council Meeting North Salon N/A 12:00 PM 2:00 PM 10th ITA-ASIL Conference Luncheon Mt. Vernon A&B N/A 3:00 PM 4:30 PM International Legal Research Kiosk Orientation Rooms 10 & 11 N/A 3:30 PM 5:00 PM International Refugee Law Interest Group Business Meeting Room 5 N/A North, Central & 4:30 PM 6:00 PM Grotius Lecture South Salon N/A Congressional 6:00 PM 8:00 PM Grotius Reception Ballroom N/A 6:30 PM 8:00 PM L Alumni Reception Mt. Vernon N/A International Legal Materials Corresponding Editors 7:00 PM 9:00 PM Reception Rooms 12 & 13 N/A 7:00 PM 10:00 PM AJIL Board Meeting, Reception and Dinner Rooms 8 & 9 N/A 8:00 PM 9:30 PM New Professionals Interest Group Happy Hour Mixx Lounge N/A

THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013

7:00 AM 8:45 AM New Member Breakfast Mt. Vernon N/A 7:30 AM 8:45 AM International Law Societies Leadership Breakfast Rooms 10 & 11 N/A 7:00 AM 8:30 AM Teaching International Law Interest Group Business Rooms 8 & 9 N/A 8:00 AM 9:00 AM Coff ee Break North, Central & 9:00 AM 9:30 AM Opening Plenary South Salons N/A 9:45 AM 11:15 AM Uncommon Remedies in Int’l Dispute Resolution North Salon 1.5 / 2.0 Alternatives to Investor-State Arbitration in a Multipolar 9:45 AM 11:15 AM World Central Salon 1.5 / 2/0 Bond v. United States: the Chemical Weapons Convention, 9:45 AM 11:15 AM Federalism and the Treaty Power South Salon 1.5/ 2.0 Stepping Out of the Politics: Legal Solutions to Maritime 9:45 AM 11:15 AM Disputes in Asia Rooms 8 & 9 1.5 / 2.0

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 7 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 Raid on Bin Laden and the Consequences on Sovereignty 9:45 AM 11:15 AM and the UN Charter Room 5 1.5 / 2.0 Rooms 12, 13 9:45 AM 11:15 AM The Future of Human Rights Fact-Finding & 14 1.5 / 2.0 10:45 AM 11:15 AM ASIL Midwest Interest Group Business Meeting Rooms 10 & 11 N/A 11:15 AM 11:30 AM Coff ee Break N/A 11:30 AM 1:00 PM International Courts & Tribunals IG Business Meeting Room 5 N/A 11:30 AM 1:00 PM Intellectual Property Rights IG Business Meeting Room 6 N/A Remote Warfare: the Moral and Legal Challenges of 11:30 AM 1:00 PM Targeted Killings in a Multipolar World South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Divergent Responses to Climate Change in a Multipolar 11:30 AM 1:00 PM World Central Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 11:30 AM 1:00 PM Transitional Justice Branches Out North Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Non-proliferation Aftermath: Legal Responsibilities under 11:30 AM 1:00 PM International Law once WMD Programs have been Secured Rooms 8 & 9 1.5 / 2.0 CLE or Destroyed Challenges and Approaches to Eff ective Cyberspace 11:30 AM 1:00 PM Governance in a Multipolar World Rooms 10 & 11 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Rooms 12, 13 11:30 AM 1:00 PM Advancing Mediation in International Investment Disputes & 14 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 1:00 PM 3:00 PM WILIG Luncheon Mt. Vernon N/A 1:30 PM 3:00 PM Arab Spring, Revolutionary Change and International Law South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 1:30 PM 3:00 PM International Legal Research IG Business Meeting Rooms 10 & 11 N/A How is the Law of the Sea Coping with New Ocean Rooms 12, 13 1:30 PM 3:00 PM Resources? & 14 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 3:00 PM 3:15 PM Coff ee Break N/A 3:15 PM 4:45 PM An Interview with a European Scholar: Alain Pellet South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 3:15 PM 4:45 PM Government Attorneys Interest Group Business Meeting Room 5 N/A Unquenchable Thirst: the Outlook for Energy Disputes Rooms 12, 13 3:15 PM 4:45 PM in Africa & 14 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 3:15 PM 4:45 PM Government Attorneys Interest Group Business Meeting Room 5 N/A 3:15 PM 4:45 PM The Inter-American Human Rights System in Crisis Rooms 8 & 9 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 3:15 PM 4:45 PM ASIL Annual General Meeting Rooms 10 & 11 N/A 4:45 PM 5:00 PM Coff ee Break N/A Retrospective on International Law in the First Obama North, South & 5:00 PM 6:30 PM Administration Central Salons 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Off site at Nat’l 6:30 PM 8:30 PM President’s Reception Portrait Gallery

8 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013

7:30 AM 9:00 AM Executive Council Breakfast Mt. Vernon N/A 7:30 AM 9:00 AM Dispute Resolution Interest Group Business Meeting Meeting Room 7 N/A 8:00 AM 9:00 AM Coff ee Break N/A Meeting Rooms 8:30 AM 9:00 AM Africa Interest Group Business Meeting 8 & 9 N/A 9:00 AM 10:30 AM Kiobel, the ATS and Human Rights Litigation in U.S. Courts South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE G20 and Beyond – The Infl uence of Emerging Countries on 9:00 AM 10:30 AM the Architecture of International Economic Law Central Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 9:00 AM 10:30 AM The EU as a Global Actor in a Multipolar World North Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 9:00 AM 10:30 AM The Past and Future of African International Law Scholarship Rooms 8 & 9 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 9:00 AM 10:30 AM The Regulation of Private Military and Security Contractors Rooms 10 & 11 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 10:30 AM 10:45 PM Coff ee Break N/A 10:45 AM 12:15 PM Unilateral Secession in a Multipolar World South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE China-Africa Investment Treaties and Dispute Settlement: 10:45 AM 12:15 PM A Piece of the Multipolar Puzzle Central Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 10:45 AM 12:15 PM Domestic Treatment of Universal Jurisdiction North Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 10:45 AM 12:15 PM Anti-corruption Initiatives in a Multipolar World Rooms 8 & 9 1.5 / 2.0 CLE

st 10:45 AM 12:15 PM 21 Century International Institutions: Lessons from Global Health Governance? Rooms 10 & 11 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Arctic Law: The Challenges of Governance in the Changing Rooms 12, 13 10:45 AM 12:15 PM Arctic & 14 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 12:30 AM 2:00 PM The Hudson Medal Luncheon Mt. Vernon N/A Congressional 12:30 PM 2:30 PM International Criminal Law Interest Group Luncheon Ballroom A N/A The Challenges for ASEAN: The South China Sea, 12:30 PM 2:00 PM Investment Protection and Myanmar South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 12:30 PM 2:00 PM Regulating the Impacts of International Project Financing Central Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 12:30 PM 2:00 PM Space Law Interest Group Business Meeting Room 5 N/A Lieber Society on the Law of Armed Confl ict Interest Group 12:30 PM 2:00 PM Business Meeting Rooms 12 & 13 N/A International Legal Theory Interest Group Business 12:30 PM 2:00 PM Meeting Rooms 10 & 11 N/A 12:30 PM 2:00 PM ASIL Southeast Interest Group Business Meeting Rooms 8 & 9 N/A 12:30 PM 2:00 PM Anti-Corruption Interest Group Business Meeting Room 3 2:00 PM 2:15 PM Coff ee Break N/A Evolution of Economic Sanctions: Where Do We Stand with 2:15 PM 3:45 PM Financial Sanctions South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE The Changing Role of Regional Organizations in African 2:15 PM 3:45 PM Peace and Security Central Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Book Discussion: “Partly Laws Common to All Mankind”: 2:15 PM 3:45 PM Foreign Laws in American Courts, by Jeremy Waldron Room 3 N/A

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 9 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 2:15 PM 3:45 PM Rethinking Private International Law North Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Rooms 12, 13 2:15 PM 3:45 PM China and International Law & 14 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 2:15 PM 3:45 PM Regional Perspectives on Refugee Protection Rooms 8 & 9 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 2:15 PM 3:45 PM The Complex History of International Law Rooms 10 & 11 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 3:45 PM 4:00 PM Coff ee Break N/A Inaugural Charles N. Brower Lecture on International North, Central & 4:00 PM 5:00 PM Dispute Resolution South Salons 1.5 / 2.0 CLE International Law & Technology Interest Group Business 4:00 PM 5:00 PM Meeting Room 5 N/A Transitional Justice & Rule of Law Interest Group Business 4:00 PM 5:00 PM Meeting Room 2 N/A International Disability Rights Interest Group Business 4:00 PM 5:00 PM Meeting Room 3 N/A International Law in Domestic Courts Interest Group Rooms 12, 13 4:00 PM 5:00 PM Business Meeting & 14 N/A Twenty Years of International Criminal Law: From the ICTY North, Central & 5:15 PM 6:30 PM to the ICC and Beyond South Salons N/A Congressional 6:30 PM 8:30 PM Members’ Reception A & B N/A 6:30 PM 8:00 PM City of the Hague Reunion Reception Mt. Vernon A N/A 6:30 PM 8:00 PM Patrons’ and Other Major Contributors’ Reception Mt. Vernon B N/A 8:00 PM 10:00 PM Annual Dinner South Salon N/A SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 7:30 AM 9:00 AM Interest Group Co-Chair Breakfast Mt. Vernon B N/A 8:45 AM 9:00 AM Coff ee Break N/A The American Branch of the International Law Association 9:00 AM 12:00 AM Executive Committee Meeting Rooms 8 & 9 N/A The Tension Between Law and Politics: Can the ICC 9:00 AM 10:30 AM Navigate a Multipolar World? South Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Multipolar Governance Across Environmental Treaty 9:00 AM 10:30 AM Regimes Central Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 9:00 AM 10:30 AM The American Approach to Treaties North Salon 1.5 / 2.0 CLE The Proliferation of Regional Trade Agreements: (Re-) 9:00 AM 10:30 AM Shaping the Trade Landscape with Multilateralism on Mt. Vernon B 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Pause The 2012 UN Declaration on the Rule of Law and its 9:00 AM 10:30 AM Projections Rooms 10 & 11 1.5 / 2.0 CLE Rooms 12, 13 9:00 AM 10:30 AM New Voices Panel: Human Rights & 14 1.5 / 2.0 CLE 10:30 AM 11:00 AM Coff ee Break N/A Closing Plenary: Global Governance, State Sovereignty, North, South & 11:00 AM 12:30 PM and the Future of International Law Central Salons 1.5 / 2.0 CLE

10 2013 Annual Meeting Program Committee

2013 PROGRAM COMMITTEE CO-CHAIRS:

Laurence Boisson Stanimir Alexandrov Kal Raustiala de Chazournes Sidley Austin LLP University of California, University of Geneva Los Angeles School of Law

MEMBERS

Natasha Affolder, Kevin Heller, Andrea J. Menaker, University of British Columbia University of Melbourne White & Case LLP Faculty of Law Law School Jide Nzelibe, Luis Felipe Aguilar Rico, Warda Henning, Northwestern University Aguilar, Loera, Cortina & United Nations Mission in School of Law Martínez South Sudan Anne Peters, Daniel Bahar, Agnes Hurwitz, Institute for Advanced Studies; Office of the United States United Nations Development Max-Planck-Institute for Trade Representative Programme Comparative Public Law and Alexander J. Belohlávek, Ian Johnstone, Public International Law; Law Offices of Tufts Fletcher School University of Basel Alexander J. Belohlávek of Law Martina Polasek, Dan Bodansky, Anna Joubin-Bret, International Centre Arizona State University, Foley Hoag LLP for Settlement of Investment Disputes Sandra Day O’Connor David Kaye, College of Law University of California, Andres Rigo, Jill Caiazzo, Irvine School of Law former World Bank IBM Corporation Laurie Mälksoo, Gabor Rona, Sarah H. Cleveland, University of Tartu Human Rights First Columbia Law School Faculty of Law Samantha Rowe, Priscilla M. Crisologo, Joanne Mariner, Debevoise & Plimpton LLP Inter-American Hunter College, City Roy Schöndorf, Development Bank University of New York Department of Special Jessica Gladstone, Tara Melish, International Affairs, Debevoise & Plimpton LLP Buffalo Human Rights Center, Ministry of Justice, Israel Nienke Grossman, State University of New York Todd Weiler, University of Baltimore at Buffalo Investment Treaty School of Law Arbitration

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 11 About ASIL

LEADERSHIP AND STAFF President: Donald Francis Donovan Honorary President: Rosalyn Higgins Vice-Presidents: John Crook, Elizabeth Andersen, Curtis Bradley, Makau Mutua, Abby Cohen Smutny Honorary Vice-Presidents: José E. Alvarez, Lucy F. Reed, David D. Caron Treasurer: Nancy L. Perkins Secretary: James Nafziger

EXECUTIVE COUNCIL

COUNCIL COUNSELLORS (to serve until Spring 2013) (to serve until Spring 2013) Jeff rey Bates, Alex Carballo, Tai-Heng Cheng, Eli Whitney John Bellinger, Laura Bocalandro, Rita Hauser, Andrew Debevoise, David Kaye, Hope Lewis, Fionnuala Ni Aoláin, Jacovides, Sandra Day O’Connor, Dinah Shelton, Bruno Gwen Young Simma, Henry Richardson, Andrés Rigo Sureda

(to serve until Spring 2014) (to serve until Spring 2014) Danny Bradlow, Marinn Carlson, Michael Newton, Hari Daniel Bethlehem, Joan Donoghue, Frederic Kirgis, Osofsky, Nathalie Reid, Edward Swaine, Bart Szewczyk, Carolyn Lamm, Chantal Th omas, D. Stephen Mathias, Allen Weiner Anthony Anghie

(to serve until Spring 2015) (to serve until Spring 2015) David Bowker, Anupam Chander, Elizabeth Chien Hale, Rosemary Barkett, Christina Cerna, Stephanie Farrior, Oona Hathaway, Jeremy Levitt, Andrea Menaker, Kal Edward Kwakwa, Beth Simmons, Paul Stephan, David Raustiala, Robert Sloane Stewart, William H. Taft , IV

Following Elections on April 4, 2013 President: Donald Francis Donovan President-elect: Lori F. Damrosch Vice-Presidents: Curtis Bradley, Abby Cohen Smutny, Gary Born, Chantal Th omas

COUNCIL COUNSELLORS (to serve until Spring 2016) (to serve until Spring 2016) Karen Bravo, Harlan Cohen, Andrew Guzman, Glenn Rita Hauser, Sandra Day O’Connor, Larry D. Johnson, Hendrix, Chimene Keitner, K. Russell LaMotte, Keith Yasuaki Onuma, Greg Shaff er, Larry D. Th ompson, Ruth Loken, Cymie Payne Wedgwood, Marcia Wiss, Bruce Zagaris

(continued on next page)

12 ASIL STAFF

Elizabeth Andersen, Executive Director/ Veronica Onorevole, Education and Research Executive Vice-President Programs Manager Michael Farley, Director of Development D. Wes Rist, Education and Research Sara Bannon, Director of Finance and Administration Programs Director Emily Cumberland, Publications Manager Stephen Scher, American Journal of International Law Senior Editor Kate Doty, Attorney Editor Markita Sing, Member Services Assistant Julie Furgerson, American Journal of International Law Associate Editor James Steiner, Web and IT Manager Matthew Gomez, Membership Manager Lara Townzen, Executive Assistant Bridget Jameson, Communications and Isaac Tubbs, Business Operations Assistant Development Coordinator and Offi ce Manager Djurdja Lazić, Director of Publications and Information Sheila Ward, Director of Communications Resources & Director of the Howard M. Holtzmann and Membership Research Center for the Study of International Arbitration and Conciliation

INTEREST GROUP CO-CHAIRS

GROUP NAME CHAIR-NAMES GROUP NAME CHAIR-NAMES

Africa Angela Banks and James Gathii International Legal Research Amy Emerson and Jootaek Lee Jeremy Maltby and Andrew Anti-Corruption Law Spalding International Legal Theory John Linarelli Christiana Ochoa, Gregory Fox, ASIL-Midwest Gregory Shaff er, Charlotte Ku, International Organizations Justin Jacinto and Lorena Perez and Marcella David Ingrid Wuerth and Harlan ASIL-Southeast Cohen International Refugee Law Tom Syring and Richard Falk Meredith Lewis and Edmund Cultural Heritage and the Arts Irina Tarsis Law in the Pacifi c Rim Region Sim Anna Spain and Christian Maria Gavouneli and Peter Dispute Resolution Leathley Law of the Sea Prows David Bigge and Blanca Government Attorneys Montejo Lieber Society Dick Jackson Bart Szewczyk and Alexandra Human Rights Saira Mohamed and Robert Blitt New Professionals Meise Bay Aaron Fellmeth and Carter Nonproliferation, Arms Control, Christopher Bidwell Intellectual Property Law Eltzroth and Disarmament International Courts and Chiara Giorgetti and Brooks Ralf Michaels and Rahim Moloo Tribunals Daly Private International Law Shahram Dana and Charles Stefan Kirchner and Joan International Criminal Law Jalloh Rights of Indigenous Peoples Policastri Stephanie Ortoleva and Hope Christopher Borgen and Brian International Disability Rights Lewis Space Law Israel International Economic Law Claire Kelly and Sungjoon Cho Teaching International Law Karen Bravo and Mark Shulman

International Environmental Timo Koivurova and Don Anton Transitional Justice and Rule Naomi Roht-Arriaza, Lorna Law of Law McGregor, and Christian De Vos International Law in Domestic Ed Swaine and Chimène Keitner Lilian del Castillo-Laborde Courts UN21 International Law and Anupan Chander and Molly Clara Brillembourg and Kristine Technology Land Women in International Law Huskey

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 13 Think law… Think Cambridge

journals.cambridge.org/tel journals.cambridge.org/nilr journals.cambridge.org/iclq journals.cambridge.org/ljil

Asian Journal of Hague Journal on the Israel Law Review Canadian Journal International Law Rule of Law journals.cambridge.org/isr of Law and Society www.AsianJIL.org journals.cambridge.org/hjrl journals.cambridge.org/cjls-rcds Also from Cambridge

journals.cambridge.org/law VISIT BOOTH #17 and SAVE 20% OUTSTANDING NEW SCHOLARSHIP in INTERNATIONAL LAW from CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

An Introduction to Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law European Law

ROBERT SCHÜTZE Armed Conflict Reparations and $85.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-02510-3: 340 pp. and Displacement Victim Support in the Disc: $68.00 The Protection of Refugees International $34.99: Paperback: 978-1-107-65444-0 and Displaced Persons under Criminal Court Disc: $27.99 International Humanitarian Law CONOR MCCARTHY MÉLANIE JACQUES $120.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01387-2: 434 pp. Collective Actions $115.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00597-6: 291 pp. Disc: $96.00 Enhancing Access to Justice and Disc: $92.00 Reconciling Multilayer Interests State Immunity Edited by STEFAN WRBKA, in International Law STEVEN VAN UYTSEL, and XIAODONG YANG MATHIAS SIEMS $160.00: Hardback: 978-0-521-84401-7: 944 pp. $140.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-02154-9: 436 pp. Disc: $128.00 Disc: $112.00

Constitutionalism of the Global South The Activist Tribunals of India, South Africa, and Colombia Cyber Warfare and the Laws of War Edited by DANIEL BONILLA MALDONADO HEATHER HARRISON DINNISS $120.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-03621-5: 408 pp. $110.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01108-3: 353 pp. Disc: $96.00 Disc: $88.00 The Human Rights Domestic Judicial Review of Foreign Investment Treaty Obligations Trade Remedies and the Environment in of Peacekeepers Experiences of the Most Active International Law WTO Members KJETIL MUJEZINOVI´C LARSEN JORGE E. VIÑUALES Edited by MÜSLÜM YILMAZ $120.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01707-8: 508 pp. $125.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00638-6: 478 pp. Disc: $96.00 Cambridge International Trade and Disc: $100.00 Economic Law

$120.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-02223-2: 459 pp. Non-Legality in Disc: $96.00 International Law Unruly Law

FLEUR JOHNS $99.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01401-5: 277 pp. Disc: $79.20

All prices are subject to change.

www.cambridge.org/us/law @CambUP_Law VISIT BOOTH #17 and SAVE 20% OUTSTANDING NEW SCHOLARSHIP in INTERNATIONAL LAW from CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Foundations of Interdisciplinary Perspectives Legal Aspects of Implementing International Migration Law on International Law the Cartagena Protocol

Edited by BRIAN OPESKIN, and International Relations on Biosafety RICHARD PERRUCHOUD, and The State of the Art Edited by JILLYANNE REDPATH-CROSS Edited by JEFFREY L. DUNOFF and MARIE-CLAIRE CORDONIER SEGGER, $120.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01771-9: 493 pp. MARK A. POLLACK FREDERIC PERRON-WELCH, and Disc: $96.00 $125.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-02074-0: 696 pp. CHRISTINE FRISON $55.00: Paperback: 978-1-107-60836-8 Disc: $100.00 $150.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00438-2: 660 pp. Disc: $44.00 $44.99: Paperback: 978-1-107-68402-7 Disc: $120.00 Disc: $35.99 Global Justice, State Duties Legal Mobilization under The Extraterritorial Scope of Authoritarianism Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights The Case of Post-Colonial Hong Kong in International Law WAIKEUNG TAM Edited by MALCOLM LANGFORD, Cambridge Studies in Law and Society WOUTER VANDENHOLE, MARTIN SCHEININ, and $95.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-03199-9: 234 pp. Disc: $76.00 WILLEM VAN GENUGTEN $140.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01277-6: 496 pp. Disc: $112.00 Second Edition International Law Mixed Jurisdictions in the U.S. Supreme Court Worldwide Continuity and Change The Third Legal Family Edited by DAVID L. SLOSS, Edited by MICHAEL D. R AMSEY, and VERNON VALENTINE PALMER WILLIAM S. DODGE $150.00: Hardback: 978-0-521-76857-3: 728 pp. $60.00: Paperback: 978-1-107-66875-1: 632 pp. Disc: $120.00 Disc: $48.00

Non-Proliferation Law International Law, US Power as a Special Regime The United States’ Quest for Legal Security Hobbes Today A Contribution to Fragmentation Theory Insights for the 21st Century SHIRLEY V. S COTT in International Law $99.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01672-9: 292 pp. Edited by S. A. LLOYD Edited by DANIEL H. JOYNER and Disc: $79.20 $99.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00059-9: 353 pp. MARCO ROSCINI Disc: $79.20 $30.00: Paperback: 978-1-107-60259-5 $105.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00971-4: 300 pp. Disc: $24.00 Disc: $84.00 Hugo Grotius Law and Development On the Law of War and Peace Non-State Actors, and the Global Discourses of Student Edition Soft Law and Legal Transfers Edited by STEPHEN C. NEFF Protective Regimes Edited by JOHN GILLESPIE and $99.00: Hardback: 978-0-521-19778-6: 546 pp. From the Margins IP ICHOLSON Disc: $79.20 P N Edited by CECILIA M. BAILLIET $42.00: Paperback: 978-0-521-12812-4 Cambridge Studies in Law and Society $99.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-02185-3: 316 pp. Disc: $33.60 $110.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-01893-8: 408 pp. Disc: $79.20 Disc: $88.00

www.cambridge.org/us/law @CambUP_Law VISIT BOOTH #17 and SAVE 20% OUTSTANDING NEW SCHOLARSHIP in INTERNATIONAL LAW from CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Third Edition The Future of The Regulatory Aftermath of the Principles of International International Law Global Financial Crisis Environmental Law Global Government EILÍS FERRAN, NIAMH MOLONEY, OEL RACHTMAN JENNIFER G. HILL, PHILIPPE SANDS and J P. T and JOHN C. COFFEE, JR. JACQUELINE PEEL ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory International Corporate Law and Financial Assisted by ADRIANA FABRA and $99.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-03589-8: 256 pp. Market Regulation RUTH MACKENZIE Disc: $79.20 $155.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-02459-5: 429 pp. $150.00: Hardback: 978-0-521-76959-4: 992 pp. Disc: $124.00 Disc: $120.00

$85.00: Paperback: 978-0-521-14093-5 Disc: $68.00 The Role of International Law in Rebuilding Societies The Cambridge Companion to after Conflict Comparative Law Great Expectations

Edited by MAURO BUSSANI and Edited by BRETT BOWDEN, UGO MATTEI HILARY CHARLESWORTH, and JEREMY FARRALL Cambridge Companions to Law The International Law $46.00: Paperback: 978-1-107-40664-3: 348 pp. $110.00: Hardback: 978-0-521-89570-5: 422 pp. of the Sea Disc: $36.80 Disc: $88.00 YOSHIFUMI TANAKA $39.99: Paperback: 978-0-521-72005-2 The Six-Day War and Disc: $31.99 $120.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00999-8: 504 pp. Disc: $96.00 Israeli Self-Defense Questioning the Legal Basis for The Cambridge Companion to $60.00: Paperback: 978-0-521-27952-9 Preventive War International Law Disc: $48.00 JOHN QUIGLEY Edited by JAMES CRAWFORD and The New Commonwealth $90.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-03206-4: 284 pp. MARTTI KOSKENNIEMI Model of Constitutionalism Disc: $72.00 Cambridge Companions to Law Theory and Practice $29.99: Paperback: 978-1-107-61002-6 $115.00: Hardback: 978-0-521-19088-6: 484 pp. Disc: $23.99 STEPHEN GARDBAUM Disc: $92.00 Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law $45.00: Paperback: 978-0-521-14308-0 Truth Commissions Disc: $36.00 $99.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00928-8: 270 pp. and Criminal Courts Disc: $79.20 ALISON BISSET $39.99: Paperback: 978-1-107-40199-0 Disc: $31.99 $85.00: Hardback: 978-1-107-00803-8: 232 pp. Disc: $68.00

All prices are subject to change.

www.cambridge.org/us/law @CambUP_Law VISIT BOOTH #17 and SAVE 20%

ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory

General Editors: Elizabeth Andersen, ASIL, Mortimer Sellers, University of Baltimore

Editorial board: Samantha Besson, Université de Fribourg, Allen Buchanan, Duke University, David Kennedy, Harvard University, Jan Klabbers, University of Helsinki, David Luban, Georgetown University, Larry May, Vanderbilt University, Mary Ellen O’Connell, University of Notre Dame, Helen Stacy, Stanford University, John Tasioulas, University College, London, Fernando Teson, Florida State University, Onuma Yasuaki, Meiji University

The purpose of the ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory is to clarify and improve the theoretical foundations of international law. Too often the progressive develop- ment and implementation of international law has foundered on confusion about fi rst principles. This series raises the level of public and scholarly discussion about the structure and purposes of the world legal order and how best to achieve global justice through law. This series grows out of the International Legal Theory project of the American Society of International Law. The ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory deepen this conversation by publishing scholarly monographs and edited vol- umes of essays considering subjects in international legal theory.

www.cambridge.org/us/ASIL Conference Information

Registration and Name Badges is used by ASIL and will not be shared with any Th e Annual Meeting Registration Desk is located on other organization for any purpose other than state- the Ballroom Level next to the main escalator. required audits. Aft er you have completed all of your courses, please stop by the CLE Help Desk to pick-up Registration Hours your CLE attendance certifi cates, located next to the Wednesday, April 3 7:00 am - 6:30 pm onsite registration table on the ballroom level of the Th ursday, April 4 7:00 am – 6:00 pm Renaissance Hotel. Friday, April 5 7:00 am- 6:00 pm Saturday, April 6 7:00 am – 10:00 am Internet Access Wireless Internet is complimentary in the hotel All conference attendees will receive their conference lobby. If you are a guest of the hotel, Internet access badge and printed program at either the pre-site or is available for a fee of $14.95/24 hours. In-room onsite registration desks. business amenities include: computer data port; high-speed Internet access. For safety and security reasons, photo ID will be required to pick up conference badges. Name badges Information Research Kiosk must be worn for admittance to all meetings, sessions, Th e International Legal Research Interest Group receptions, lunches, and dinner. Th e badges also (ILRIG), comprised of ASIL members who are legal contain a bar code for scanning attendance at each information professionals and legal scholars, is session for Continuing Legal Education purposes. off ering new research services to Annual Meeting participants. Please stop by the kiosk located across Continuing Legal Education (CLE) credit from the onsite registration table on the ballroom level of the hotel for more info. Th e 2013 ASIL Annual Meeting off ers attendees nearly 33 Continuing Legal Education (CLE) course ASIL Annual Meeting Blog and Live-Streaming sessions on a wide variety of topics presented by Th e Society’s Annual Meeting is hosting a blog. seasoned international legal experts. Participation is ASIL Cables, at asilcables. org, will publish daily on a walk-in basis. reports on discussions and events, as they occur at the Meeting, and connect – almost in real time – In order to streamline the accreditation process, conferees with the rest of the world. ASIL Cables is CLE participants will record their attendance at a way to stay abreast of the latest ideas generated at each session by scanning the bar code on their name the Meeting – session by session – and is also another tag at the entrance of each session room at the start arena for ASIL members to engage each other in and end of each scheduled session time. Staff and conversations, either as contributors to ASIL Cables volunteers will be monitoring each scanner and can or by posting comments. ASIL Cables contributors assist you with any questions you may have. Badges refl ect the diversity and richness of the Society’s will be scanned if you exit a session early and partial membership. And, just as the physical meeting now credit will be given (based on either a 50-minute or brings together several organizations, this online 60-minute increment). Data collected by this process arena will collaborate with other internet fora,

20 cross-posting with the Opinio Juris, IntLawGrrls, Message Board and Global Arbitration Review blogs. Learn more Messages may be left with ASIL staff at the Annual during the Meeting by visiting asilcables.org. Fift een Meeting registration desk or on a provided bulletin Annual Meeting sessions will be live-streamed via the board, located on the Ballroom Level of the hotel. internet. ASIL staff will endeavor to forward your message to the relevant party. Family & Child Care ASIL does not provide childcare services on-site at Recycling the conference. However, in support of participants in When you are fi nished with the conference, please need of professional childcare services while on-site recycle your name badge by handing them to the at the conference, the following referral is provided designated registration representative onsite. solely for the convenience of conference attendees. ASIL assumes no liability regarding the service Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) they provide. We encourage all participants to also Accommodations do their due diligence when selecting a childcare ASIL is able to provide reasonable provider. Please contact Hazel Henningan at (202) accommodations for attendees with disabilities, 723-2051 for more information. so long as we are informed of your disability in writing prior to our meeting. Please contact Electronic Devices Eden Capuano at [email protected], We kindly ask that you silence your electronic devices if you have special needs. during the meeting sessions.

Non-Smoking Law Washington DC law prohibits smoking in all areas of the hotel except for designated smoking guest rooms. Guestrooms and all public spaces at Th e Marriott Renaissance, Washington, DC are non-smoking.

Photography ASIL will have a photographer onsite taking photographs in sessions, special events, keynote addresses, and throughout the Marriott Renaissance documenting the 2013 Annual Meeting. Fift een sessions of the Annual Meeting will be video- recorded and live-streamed for viewing via the internet. Photos and videos taken of attendees during ASIL events will remain the property of ASIL and may be used in future marketing materials. By registering, Annual Meeting attendees consent to such use of any images taken at the meeting.

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 21 2013 ASIL Annual Meeting Speakers

Ademola Abass John Cerone Michael Ewing-Chow KInji Akashi Efraim Chalamish Clemens Feinäugle Payam Akhavan Anupam Chander Mark Feldman Roger Alford Steve Charnovitz Benjamin Ferencz Philip Alston Fuli Chen Donald Ferencz Jose Alvarez Huiping Chen Isabel Fernández de la Cuesta Emilio Alvarez Icaza Simon Chesterman Susan D. Franck Diane Marie Amann Cliff Manjiao Chi José-Manuel Garcia Represa Joel Antonio Hernández Th éodore Christakis David Gartner García Deirdre Clancy James Th uo Gathii Barry Appleton Andrew Clapham Maria Gavouneli Freya Baetens Sarah Cleveland Erika George Betsy Baker Jack Coe Kristina Maria Gjerde Asli Bali Kim Diana Connolly David Glazier David Balton Hans Corell Manuel Gonzalez-Sáenz Rukia Baruti Lori Damrosch Guy Goodwin-Gill Robert Beckman Shahram Dana Jennifer Gorskie John Bellinger Breno de Souza Diaz de Costa Alexander Greenawalt Fatou Bensouda Erika de Wet Robert T. Grey, Jr. Daniel Bethlehem Margaret de Guzman David R. Haigh, Q.C. Chris Bidwell Jacques DeLisle Daniel Halberstam Sue Biniaz Richard Deutsch Oona Hathaway Andrea K. Bjorklund Richard Dicker Arif Havas Oegroseno Gisela Bolívar Donald Francis Donovan Rosalyn Higgins Nicola Bonucci David Downes Sami Houerbi Daniel Bradlow Mark Drumbl Tan Hsien-Li Paul Brigner Pascale Dubois Miguel López Forastier Edith Brown Weiss Ariel Dulitzky Deborah Isser Gian Luca Burci Claudia J. Dumas William Jacobson William Burke-White Patrick Dumberry Bing Bing Jia Edward Cameron Piet Eeckhout Vanessa J. Jiménez David D. Caron Samuel Estreicher Jacob Katz Cogan Galo Carrera Hurtado Jessica Evans Benedict Kingsbury Barry Carter Uche Ewelukwa-Ofodile Orde Kittrie

22 Stephanie Klein-Ahlbrandt Diane Orentlicher Bruno Simma Anja Klug Hari Osofsky Anne-Marie Slaughter John Kneuer Umut Özsu Randa Slim Harold Hongju Koh Austen Parrish Bill Slomanson Marcelo Kohen Faiza Patel Mirko Sossai Timo Koivurova Andreas Paulus Frédéric Sourgens Julian Ku Moria Paz Andy Spalding Katharina Kummer Peiry Jacqueline Peel Chandra Sriram Ross LaJeunesse Alain Pellet Margrete Stevens Peter Lallas Monica Pinto Sheelagh Stewart Suzanne Lalonde Ileana Porras Adam Szubin Maximo Langer Michael H. Posner Xiomei Tan Catherine Latrionte Jennifer Prah Ruger Joel P. Trachtman Barton Legum Peter Prows Peter Trooboff Maya Lester Chelsea Purvis Antonios Tzanakopoulos Céline Lévesque Steven Ratner James Upcher Mike Levi Mathias Reimann Beth Van Schaack Michael Lodge August Reinisch V.V. Johnny Veeder Don Mahley Michael Reisman Jure Vidmar Chris Maina Peter Matthew Reynolds Jorge Villarino Loretta Malintoppi Darryl Robinson Margaret Vogt Vilawan Mangklatanakul Meg Roggensack Jeremy Waldron Michael Mattler Naomi Roht-Arriaza Joseph Weiler Julie Maupin Sonia E. Rolland Elizabeth Whitsitt Mark Mazzetti Brian Root Cynthia Williams Fred Megret Susan Rose-Ackerman Abiodun Williams Th eodor Meron Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz Elizabeth Wilson José Miguel Vivanco Don Rothwell Tamara Wittes Marko Milanovic Bradley Samuels Jarrod Wong Serena Moe Marco Sassòli Mark Wu Rahim Moloo Margaret Satterthwaite Hanqin Xue Michael Moore David Scheff er Jason Yackee Makau Mutua Susan Schwab Alexander Yankov Th ierry Mutumbo Kalonji Iain Scobbie Sienho Yee Habib Nassar Tullio Scovazzi Noriko Yodogawa André Nollkaemper Hina Shamsi Katharine Young Sarah Nouwen Wenhua Shan Valentin Zellweger George Okoth-Obbo Dinah Shelton James X. Zhan Peter Oppenheimer Ilana Shulman Ineta Ziemele Nilüfer Oral Edmund Sim

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 23 AUTHORITATIVE RESOURCES FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW RESEARCH AND SCHOLARSHIP

Visit the Oxford University Press booth to receive 35% off all titles on display* and learn more about Oxford Law Online

General International Law THE UNITED NATIONS CONVENTION PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL ON JURISDICTIONAL IMMUNITIES ECONOMIC LAW INTERNATIONAL LAW IN THE OF STATES AND THEIR PROPERTY Matthias Herdegen U.S. LEGAL SYSTEM A Commentary 2013 | 536 PAGES | 9780199579877 Curtis Bradley Edited by Roger O’Keefe and Christian J. Tams PAPERBACK $75.00 / $60.00 2013 | 400 PAGES | 9780195328592 2013 | 536 PAGES | 9780199601837 9780199579860 HARDCOVER $75.00 / $60.00 HARDCOVER $165.00 / $132.00 HARDCOVER $180.00 / $144.00

BRIERLY’S LAW OF NATIONS INFORMAL INTERNATIONAL International Criminal Law An Introduction to the Role of International Law LAWMAKING in International Relations Edited by Joost Pauwelyn, Ramses Wessel, TREATISE ON INTERNATIONAL Seventh Edition and Jan Wouters CRIMINAL LAW Andrew Clapham 2012 | 584 PAGES | 9780199658589 Volume 1: Foundations and General Part 2012 | 576 PAGES | 9780199657933 HARDCOVER $155.00 / $124.00 Kai Ambos HARDCOVER $120.00 / $96.00 2013 | 520 PAGES | 9780199657926 9780199657940 THE CHARTER OF THE UNITED NATIONS HARDCOVER $165.00 / $132.00 PAPERBACK $50.00 / $40.00 A Commentary Third Edition AN INTRODUCTION TO BROWNLIE’S PRINCIPLES OF Edited by Bruno Simma, Daniel-Erasmus Khan, TRANSNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW Georg Nolte, and Andreas Paulus Neil Boister Eighth Edition 2013 | 2,606 PAGES | 9780199580156 2012 | 352 PAGES | 9780199605385 James Crawford HARDCOVER $650.00 / $520.00 HARDCOVER $120.00 / $96.00 2012 | 888 PAGES | 9780199699698 9780199605392 PAPERBACK $76.50 / $61.20 International Commercial, Trade, and Investment Law PAPERBACK $49.99 / $40.00

THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF THE COMMENTARIES ON SELECTED CASSESE’S INTERNATIONAL HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW MODEL INVESTMENT TREATIES CRIMINAL LAW Edited by Bardo Fassbender, Edited by Chester Brown Third Edition Anne Peters, Simone Peter, 2013 | 1,024 PAGES | 9780199645190 Antonio Cassese and Paola Gaeta and Daniel Högger HARDCOVER $325.00 / $260.00 2013 | 472 PAGES | 9780199694921 2013 | 1,272 PAGES | 9780199599752 PAPERBACK $65.00 / $52.00 HARDCOVER $210.00 / $168.00 PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT LAW INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL THE OXFORD GUIDE TO TREATIES Second Edition PROCEDURE Edited by Duncan B. Hollis Rudolf Dolzer and Christoph Schreuer Principles and Rules 2012 | 872 PAGES | 9780199601813 2013 | 456 PAGES | 9780199651795 Edited by Goran Sluiter, Hakan Friman, HARDCOVER $225.00 / $180.00 HARDCOVER $165.00 / $132.00 Suzannah Linton, Salvatore Zappala, 9780199651801 and Sergey Vasiliev PAPERBACK $68.00 / $54.40 2013 | 1,760 PAGES | 9780199658022 HARDCOVER $505.00 / $404.00

To order or for more information, visit our booth; call our customer service team at 1-866-445-8685 or visit us online at www.oup.com/us and use promo code 31670 to save 20%. Offer expires 6/3/2013. *35% DISCOUNT APPLIES ONLY TO PURCHASES MADE AT THE ASIL ANNUAL MEETING AND DOES NOT INCLUDE WEB ORDERS. AUTHORITATIVE RESOURCES FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW RESEARCH AND SCHOLARSHIP

Visit the Oxford University Press booth to receive 35% off all titles on display* and learn more about Oxford Law Online

International Dispute Settlement and Arbitration International Human Rights Law Use of Force and the Law of Armed Conflict

THE UNCITRAL ARBITRATION RULES INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS NUCLEAR WEAPONS A Commentary Philip Alston and Ryan Goodman COUNTERPROLIFERATION Second Edition 2012 | 1,632 PAGES | 9780199578726 A New Grand Bargain David D. Caron and Lee M. Caplan PAPERBACK $59.95 / $48.00 Jack Garvey 2013 | 1,136 PAGES | 9780199696307 2013 | 248 PAGES | 9780199841271 HARDCOVER $305.00 / $244.00 REGIONAL PROTECTION OF HARDCOVER $85.00 / $68.00 HUMAN RIGHTS THE HISTORY OF ICSID Second Edition LITIGATING WAR Antonio R. Parra Dinah Shelton and Paolo G. Carozza Mass Civil Injury and the Eritrea-Ethiopia 2012 | 488 PAGES | 9780199660568 2013 | 992 PAGES | 9780199941520 Claims Commission HARDCOVER $140.00 / $112.00 HARDCOVER $225.00 / $180.00 Sean D. Murphy, Won Kidane, and Thomas R. Snider THE LAW AND PROCEDURE OF THE REGIONAL PROTECTION OF 2013 | 1,064 PAGES | 9780199793723 INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE HUMAN RIGHTS: DOCUMENTARY HARDCOVER $225.00 / $180.00 Fifty Years of Jurisprudence SUPPLEMENT Hugh Thirlway 9780199301621 THE COUNTERINSURGENT’S 2013 | 2,032 PAGES | 9780199668250 PAPERBACK $95.00 / $76.00 CONSTITUTION HARDCOVER $470.00 / $376.00 ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PACK: Law in the Age of Small Wars 9780199324545 Ganesh Sitaraman THE STATUTE OF THE TWO VOLUME PACK $295.00 / $236.00 2012 | 352 PAGES | 9780199930319 INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE HARDCOVER $35.00 / $28.00 A Commentary THE SLAVE TRADE AND THE Second Edition ORIGINS OF INTERNATIONAL International Law and Politics Edited by Andreas Zimmermann, HUMAN RIGHTS LAW Karin Oellers-Frahm, Christian Tomuschat, Jenny S. Martinez CONSTITUTIONAL ENGAGEMENT IN and Christian J. Tams 2012 | 264 PAGES | 9780195391626 A TRANSNATIONAL ERA 2012 | 1,808 PAGES | 9780199692996 HARDCOVER $29.95 / $23.96 Vicki Jackson HARDCOVER $575.00 / $460.00 2013 | 540 PAGES | 9780199934690 HUMANITY’S LAW PAPERBACK $45.00 / $36.00 International Environmental and Energy Law Ruti Teitel 2013 | 320 PAGES | 9780199975464 OVERHEATED PAPERBACK $24.95 / $19.96 The Human Cost of Climate Change Andrew T. Guzman 2013 | 280 PAGES | 9780199933877 Oxford Congratulates our ASIL Award Winners for 2013 HARDCOVER $29.95 / $23.96 2013 Certificate of Merit for a Work in 2013 Certificate of Merit for High a Specialized Area of Law Technical Craftsmanship and Utility to Petros Mevroidis Practicing Lawyers and Scholars Trade in Goods Duncan Hollis The Oxford Guide to Treaties

To order or for more information, visit our booth; call our customer service team at 1-866-445-8685 or visit us online at www.oup.com/us and use promo code 31670 to save 20%. Offer expires 6/3/2013. *35% DISCOUNT APPLIES ONLY TO PURCHASES MADE AT THE ASIL ANNUAL MEETING AND DOES NOT INCLUDE WEB ORDERS. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS AUTHORITATIVE RESOURCES FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW RESEARCH AND SCHOLARSHIP

Visit the Oxford University Press booth to receive 35% off all titles on display* and learn more about Oxford Law Online

OXFORD SCHOLARLY AUTHORITIES ON INTERNATIONAL LAW

Oxford Scholarly Authorities on International Law brings a major new dimension to our offerings for scholars and practitioners working in public international law. OSAIL contains full-text online editions of Oxford’s market-leading reference works and treatises. All titles are fully searchable by subject matter, title, and author, and are linked, via the Oxford Law Citator, to relevant case reports and articles within all of Oxford University Press’s online law products. With integrated access across our international law services the researcher is now one step closer to the perfect research solution. Visit: www.oxfordonline.com.

Users Can: t#SPXTFUJUMFTCZBVUIPSBOEDPOUSJCVUPS UJUMF BOETVCKFDU t4FBSDIGVMMUFYUPGFWFSZUJUMF PSTFBSDIXJUIJOJOEJWJEVBMUJUMFT t.PWFCFUXFFOUIFTFSFGFSFODFTBOEDBTFSFQPSUT t3FMZPOUIFMBUFTUDPOUFOUXJUIOFXUJUMFTBEEFEUXJDFBZFBS

OXFORD REPORTS ON THE MAX PLANCK INTERNATIONAL LAW ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PUBLIC With reports on over 4,000 cases, Oxford Reports on INTERNATIONAL LAW International Law is as a must-have resource for the This comprehensive online resource contains peer international law researcher. reviewed articles on every aspect of public international law.

JOURNALS FROM OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

ICSID Review Launching with Oxford EuropeanE Journal of University Press in 2013! InternationalI Law A specialized periodical London Review of devoted to foreign International Law Hand-pickedH articles investment law and fromf EJIL featured in the international investment Imaginative thinking, ‘‘International Law in a dispute settlement. innovative analysis, and MMultipolar World’ article excellence in writing: find ccollection from Oxford out more about submitting Journals.J online www.icsidreview.oxfordjournals.org www.lril.oxfordjournals.org www.ejil.oxfordjournals.org

To order or for more information, visit our booth; call our customer service team at 1-866-445-8685 or visit us online at www.oup.com/us and use promo code 31670 to save 20%. Offer expires 6/3/2013. *35% DISCOUNT APPLIES ONLY TO PURCHASES MADE AT THE ASIL ANNUAL MEETING AND DOES NOT INCLUDE WEB ORDERS. MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 2013

Fall 2013 Fall New York City York New www.asil.org/midyear and Research Forum Research and As they become available, details will be posted at details will be posted available, become As they ASIL’s Midyear Meeting Midyear ASIL’s To find out more about the American Society of International Law or to join, visit www.asil.org. of International Law about the American Society find out more To The WILIG Mentoring Program!

Learn more at the WILIG Mentoring Program happy hour: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 2013 WEDNESDAY, Thursday, from 7:00-8:00 pm at Zengo, 781 7th St NW (btwn H & G).

The WILIG Mentoring Program (WMP) connects experienced female international law professionals with female law students and new professionals interested in the field of international law. Mentoring takes place in a group setting, with a maximum of four mentees for every mentor. Mentors and mentees meet in person several times during the course of a year to discuss topics and engage in activities designed to help junior women enter and be successful in the field of international law. Upon finishing the requirements of the one-year program, all participants receive a certificate of completion.

Applications for Mentors & Mentees are now open. The program will take place during the 2013-14 academic year.

Sign up for more information by emailing [email protected] MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA AGENDA MAIN PROGRAM

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

ITA Breakfast 7:00 am - 9:00 am Central Salon

10th ITA-ASIL Conference 9:00 am - 12:00 pm Central Salon

Separate registration with the ITA is required.

ASIL Executive Council Orientation Meeting 9:00 am - 11:00 am North Salon

ASIL Executive Council Meeting 11:30 am - 3:30 pm North Salon

10th ITA-ASIL Conference Luncheon 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm Mt. Vernon

Separate registration with the ITA is required.

International Legal Research Interest Group Kiosk Orientation 3:00 pm – 4:30 pm Rooms 10 & 11

International Refugee Law Interest Group Business Meeting 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm Room 5 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 2013

27 Grotius Lecture: Th e Inter-American System and Challenges for its Future 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm North, South & Central Salons Co-sponsored by American University Washington College of Law

2013 Grotius Lecturer: Emilio Álvarez Icaza, Executive Secretary, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 2013 WEDNESDAY, Discussant: W. Michael Reisman, Yale Law School

Grotius Reception 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm Congressional Ballroom Co-sponsored by American University Washington College of Law

L Alumni Reception 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm Mt. Vernon

AJIL Board Reception and Dinner 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm Rooms 8 & 9

International Legal Materials Corresponding Editors Reception 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm Room 12

New Professionals’ Interest Group Happy Hour 8:00 pm - 9:30 pm Mixx Lounge

2828 MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA

SAVE THE DATE April 7-12, 2014 • Washington, DC

I ASILL A th

• 1500+ international legal experts from 100+ countries • 30+ substantive sessions • 25+ Open Working Sessions of ILA Committees & Study Groups • Keynotes featuring leading global figures • Receptions, gatherings and much more THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013

To find out more about the American Society of International Law or to join, visit www.asil.org. To find out more about the International Law Association, visit www.ila-hq.org Are you getting all you can

THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 THURSDAY, out of your ASIL Membership?

As an ASIL member, you have a wealth of resources at your fingertips. Below is a sampling of what is available.

t "DDFTTUIF"NFSJDBO+PVSOBMPG*OUFSOBUJPOBM-BX  *OUFSOBUJPOBM-FHBM.BUFSJBMT BOEUIF4PDJFUZT"OOVBM .FFUJOH1SPDFFEJOHTPOMJOF BTTPPOBTUIFZHPUPQSJOU

t 'JOEDPMMFBHVFTXJUITJNJMBSJOUFSFTUTPOUIF"4*-POMJOF .FNCFS%JSFDUPSZBOEIFMQUIFNĕOEZPVCZLFFQJOHZPVS DPOUBDUEFUBJMTBOEBSFBTPGFYQFSUJTFVQUPEBUF t (FUJOWPMWFEXJUIPOFPG"4*-T*OUFSFTU(SPVQTBOE FYDIBOHFJEFBTXJUIPUIFSNFNCFSTPOFWFSZUIJOHGSPN EJTQVUFSFTPMVUJPOUPOPOQSPMJGFSBUJPO t &BSO$POUJOVJOH-FHBM&EVDBUJPODSFEJUTCZBUUFOEJOHBO "4*-FWFOUJOQFSTPOPSBXFCJOBSPOMJOF t -PDBUFBOEPSDPOUSJCVUFJOUFSOBUJPOBMMBXFWFOUTCZWJTJUJOH "4*-TPOMJOFDBMFOEBS

Whatever you need to succeed, ASIL has you covered. Stop by the ASIL Annual Meeting exhibit booth today to update your contact information, register your interests and areas of expertise, and have an ASIL staff member show you all that’s available online.

Check us out at asil.org, and follow us on

MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA AGENDA MAIN PROGRAM THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 29 ese alternatives alternatives ese

Business Meeting Business siness Meeting w Interest Group w Interest terest Group Bu terest April 4, 2013 4, April cacy and legitimacy of the investment arbitration process expressed expressed process arbitration cacy the investment legitimacy of and ee Break ee ee Break ee

Donald Donovan, Debevoise & Plimpton, LLP Debevoise & Plimpton, Donovan, Donald

9:30 am – 9:45 am 9:30 am 8:00 am – 9:00 am 8:00 am Coff Coff

CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: Thursday, International Environmental LaInternational International Law SocietiesInternational Leadership Breakfast – 8:45 am 7:30 am 10 Room Meeting New Member Breakfast Member New am - 8:45 7:00 am Vernon Mt. 7:00 am – 8:30 am 7:00 am 8 & 9 Rooms Meeting by “rising powers,” including Brazil, Russia and South Africa, there has been increasing interest in Africa, South interest has been and there increasing Russia Brazil, including powers,” “rising by Th disputes. investment managing model for treaty-based the standard to alternatives forms non-adjudicative other and policies, mediation de-escalation and prevention dispute include exploring Design. By Systems wholesale Dispute and negotiations concurrent resolution, dispute of legal regime. economic international responsive a more create may stakeholders these alternatives, Given concerns about the effi about concerns Given Alternatives to Investor-State Arbitration in a Multi-Polar World in a Multi-Polar Arbitration Investor-State to Alternatives - 11:15 am 9:45 am Salon Central Cosponsored by the and Group Interest Economic Law Sponsored by the International Law Environmental the International and Group, Interest Courts Tribunals and International Group Interest Opening Plenary: President’s Address: ASIL Today ASIL Address: Opening Plenary: President’s – 9:30 am 9:00 am Salons & Central South Speaker: Teaching International Law In International Teaching 7:00 am - 8:30 am - 8:30 am 7:00 am 11 Room Moderator: Jason Yackee, University of Wisconsin-Madison Speakers: • Barry Appleton, Appleton & Associates • Andrea K. Bjorklund, UC-Davis School of Law • Céline Lévesque, University of Ottawa • Cliff Manjiao Chi, Xiamen University Law School

THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 THURSDAY, Uncommon Remedies in International Dispute Resolution 9:45 am – 11:15 am North Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Dispute Resolution Interest Group, the Private International Law Interest Group, and the International Courts and Tribunals Interest Group

Th e most common remedies in international dispute resolution consist of monetary damages awards or declarations of non-compliance with international rules. However, there are other potential options, including moral damages and interim injunctive relief. Th e potential availability of unorthodox remedies raises many questions, including whether relief granted in one forum could cross-fertilize its adoption in another. Considerations about when to grant such relief go right to the heart of the evolving nature of the State itself.

Moderator: Frédéric G. Sourgens, Washburn School of Law Speakers: • Isabel Fernández de la Cuesta, King & Spalding LLP • Jennifer Gorskie, Chaff etz Lindsey LLP • José-Manuel Garcia Represa, Dechert LLP • James Upcher, Volterra Fietta • Elizabeth Whitsitt, University of Calgary Faculty of Law • Jarrod Wong, McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacifi c

Bond v. United States: the Chemical Weapons Convention, Federalism and the Treaty Power 9:45 am – 11:15 am South Salon

In Bond v. United States, the Supreme Court will address whether and to what extent the Constitution’s structural federalism limitations constrain Congress’ authority to implement a valid treaty, in light of the decision in Missouri v. Holland; whether the implementing legislation for the Chemical Weapons Convention, 18 U.S.C. § 229, as applied in Bond, improperly treads on state law enforcement authorities; and if so, whether a construction of the statute is available that would avoid potential constitutional infi rmity. Th is panel will explore historical and structural issues regarding the status of the treaty power in the U.S. federal system, as well as the specifi c questions raised in Bond relating to domestic implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

30 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 c 31 set may e intervention the legal issues will explore is panel d the corresponding entitlements of the coastal of entitlements d the corresponding John Cerone, Center for International Law and Policy at New England Law England New at Policy and Law International for Center Cerone, John Global Security Institute Jr., Grey, Robert T. Sarah Cleveland, Columbia Law School Law Columbia Cleveland, Sarah School Law Yale Hathaway, Oona Center Law University Georgetown Quinn Rosenkranz, Nicolas • • • • • CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: Stepping Out of the Politics – Legal in Asia the Politics Disputes Out of Maritime Solutions to Stepping – 11:15 am 9:45 am 8 & 9 Rooms in the Pacifi the Law and Group Interest Law Environmental Cosponsored by the International What are the international legal consequences of the precedent set by the United States’ method States’ the United set by the precedent of legal consequences the international are What less destructive and less invasive utilizing of Laden? Bin Instead Osama on in the raid choice of helicopters send to chose attack the U.S. Pakistan, by to acquiesced strikes previously drone Th sovereignty. its invading arguably country, another into soldiers and Raid on Bin LadenRaid Bin on and the Consequences and the UN Charter Sovereignty for am 9:45 am – 11:15 10 & 11 Rooms Meeting Association Students Law International by the Sponsored Moderator: TBD Speakers: in the seas of features concerning tension has beenOver there heightened the past several years, these seas, of an delimitations the maritime Asia, a precedent for other nations to justify a similar strike. Th strike. justify a similar to nations other for a precedent force. the use of for implications its and the operation surrounding Group Rim Region Interest been raised have the stakes mineral deposits, other and the discovery hydrocarbon of With States. navigation. of freedom and development both economic risk threatening these disputes and political, to in addition legal, develop and explore to incentive is great there Consequently, disputes. these to maritime solutions Speakers: Moderator: Nilüfer Oral, Faculty of Law, Istanbul Bilgi University Speakers: • Robert Beckman, Centre for International Law (CIL), National University of Singapore • Rosalyn Higgins, DBE, QC, Past President of the International Court of Justice • Galo Carrera Hurtado, Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf • Loretta Malintoppi, Eversheds LLP Paris • Alexander Yankov, Tribunal for the Law of the Sea THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 THURSDAY, Th e Future of Human Rights Fact-Finding 9:45 am - 11:15 am Rooms 12, 13 & 14 CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Human Rights Interest Group, the Lieber Society on the Law of Armed Confl ict, the International Refugee Law Interest Group, the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Interest Group, the International Criminal Law Interest Group, the Transitional Justice and the Rule of Law Interest Group, the International Legal Research Interest Group, and the International Disability Rights Interest Group

Recent years have seen a proliferation of innovative methods of human rights fact-fi nding and analysis, from spatial mapping to statistics. At the same time, however, there has been a serious backlash against human rights reporting. Critics have disputed the reliability of human rights fact-fi nding methodologies and interpretive techniques, questioned the rigor of human rights investigations, and denied the accuracy of reported fi ndings. Th is panel will explore the opportunities and challenges of the current era of human rights fact-fi nding.

Moderator: Philip Alston, New York University School of Law Speakers: • Steven Ratner, University of Michigan Law School • Brian Root, Human Rights Watch • Margaret Satterthwaite, New York University School of Law • Bradley Samuels, Situ Studio, Forensic Architecture Project

ASIL Midwest Interest Group Business Meeting 10:45 am - 11:15 am Rooms 10 & 11

Coff ee Break 11:15 am – 11:30 am

3232 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 33 ed and and ed American Latin -leaning the increasingly will address e panel International, International Institute for for Institute International International, ’s policy on targeted killings raise moral moral raise killings policy targeted on ’s necessity, distinction, proportionality, and and proportionality, distinction, necessity, ects of this multipolarity? From a normative perspective, a normative From thisects multipolarity? of ict the International Refugee Law Interest Group, and the International Legal Legal the International and Group, Refugee Interest Law ict the International erent kinds of international instruments. Th instruments. international kinds of erent Mark Mazzetti, New York Times York New Mazzetti, Mark

een years ago, the Kyoto Protocol negotiations were largely a negotiation between the between a negotiation largely were negotiations Protocol the Kyoto ago, years een Daniel Bethlehem,Daniel Legal 20 Essex Policy Street, Studies Strategic School Law Loyola Glazier, David Marco Geneva of School Law Sassòli, University Liberties Civil American Union Security Project, National Shamsi, Hina ft • • • • Group eory Interest CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: multipolar and polycentric nature of the international response to climate change. From a From change. climate to response the international of nature polycentric and multipolar the eff are what perspective, positive diversifi a more gridlock, or and fragmentation produce to likely it a good Is thing? is it regime? change climate robust more ultimately Only fi Only a wide Today, targets. emission country developed about Union European and States United the world’s China (now including regime, change in the climate roles key play states of variety Africa); South small and Brazil, (India, group in the BASIC partners its and emitter) biggest Conference Durban last year’s the EU at with which joined least states, developed and island a new on negotiations initiate to pushed successfully that majority” “ambitious an form to left of the group post-2020 period; for the ALBA and instrument Recent disclosures about the Obama Administration the Obama about disclosures Recent Moderator: Responses ChangeDivergent Climate in a Multipolar World to – 1:00 pm 11:30 am Salon Central Group Interest Law Environmental Cosponsored the International by Th so, If war? it Is law. rights human and humanitarian of the application about legal questions and rules military of law the humanitarian should how risk in which personal decisions targeting individual to apply undertake to precautions obligation rules then what apply? war, not the military If from calculus? is removed Speakers: the to addition in 2009. In the Copenhagen Accord of adoption which blocked countries, is also change climate negotiations, change the UN climate of character multipolar increasingly through levels many at operating actors, and institutions of a wider variety being addressed by diff of a variety Remote Warfare: the Moral and Legal Challenges of Targeted Killings a Multipolar in World Legal and the Moral Challenges Targeted of Warfare: Remote – 1:00 pm 11:30 am South Salon Societythe Lieber Law on the Group, Interest Law Criminal Cosponsored the International by Confl Armed of Moderator: Elliot Diringer, Centre for Climate and Energy Solutions Speakers: • Edward Cameron, Business for Social Responsibility • Michael Levi, Council on Foreign Relations • Hari Osofsky, University of Minnesota School of Law • Jacqueline Peel, University of Melbourne Law School

THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 THURSDAY, Transitional Justice Branches Out 11:30 am – 1:00 pm North Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Sponsored by the Transitional Justice and the Rule of Law Interest Group and Cosponsored by the Africa Interest Group, the Women in International Law Interest Group, and the International Criminal Law Interest Group

Transitional justice has branched out considerably over the last quarter century. Th is panel will consider whether, how, and why the fi eld is expanding into areas of international criminal law, institutional reform and rule of law promotion, and socio-economic rights (such as land restitution and reform), and how these newer interdisciplinary and oft en bottom-up initiatives have challenged dominant western views of transitional justice’s goals, scope and priorities.

Moderator: Naomi Roht-Arriaza, Hastings School of Law Speakers: • Payam Akhavan, McGill University • Deborah Isser, Justice Reform Practice Group, World Bank • Chandra Lekha Sriram, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

International Courts and Tribunals Interest Group Business Meeting 11:30 am – 1:00 pm Meeting Room 5

Nonproliferation Aft ermath: Legal Responsibilities under International Law once WMD Programs have been Secured or Destroyed 11:30 am – 1:00 pm Rooms 8 & 9 CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Sponsored by the Nonproliferation, Arms Control, & Disarmament Interest Group and Cosponsored by the Government Attorneys Interest Group

Th is program will explore what happens when a party to any of the key WMD treaties (chemical, biological, nuclear) acquires elements of another nations’ or group’s WMD program. Th e recent experiences in Iraq and Libya of WMD remediation have opened up these previously unaddressed questions. Th e potential for new confl icts where one of the parties potentially has a WMD program make this topic timely.

34 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 35 e proposed proposed e ective dispute resolution resolution dispute ective in which a mock mediation features is program ective Cyberspace Governance in a Multipolar World America Bureau North Society, e Internet en used in commercial disputes between private parties, it remains remains parties, it between private disputes en used commercial in Anupam Chander, UC Davis School Law UC Davis of Chander, Anupam Chris Bidwell, Federation of American Scientists American of Federation Chris Bidwell, John Kneuer, Globalstar, Inc.; Inc.; Globalstar, Kneuer, John Cortes Spain Generales of Deputies, of Congress Villarino, Jorge Th Brigner, Paul Orde Kittrie, Arizona State University State Arizona Kittrie, Orde University Georgetown Lotrionte, Catherine State of Department U.S. Mahley, Don • • • • • • CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: method in international investment disputes? Th disputes? investment method in international be used could Mediation State on Rules under the IBA mediation how will show the panelists mediating of cons and the pros a discussion of by will be followed It disputes. settle such to disputes. investment international uncommon in investor-State disputes. Could mediation become an eff become an Could mediation disputes. in investor-State uncommon While mediation is oft mediation While Advancing Mediation in International Investment Disputes Investment in International Mediation Advancing – 1:00 pm 11:30 am 12, 13 & 14 Rooms the Private Group, Interest Courts Tribunals and Cosponsored by the International Group Interest Economic Law the International and Group Interest Law International Challenges and Approaches to Eff to Challenges and Approaches as more complex increasingly is growing cyberspace governance controversial, Perennially content, web-based of the regulation Consider the Internet. over assert authority governments intellectual of the protection with clashes dissemination information of the promotion where Th certain materials. web-based censor to some by the desire and rights property Moderator: Speakers: Speakers: – 1:00 pm 11:30 am 10 & 11 Rooms Cosponsored by the and Group Interest Law International Sponsored Private by the Interest Research Legal the International and Group, Interest Technology and Law International Group issues the novel and “.Zulu”) and “.Catholic” (e.g., system name the domain of expansion this complexity. add to only iTunes) and gambling trade (e.g., web-based by implicated Moderator: Moderator: Susan D. Franck, Washington and Lee University Law School Speakers: • Jack Coe, Pepperdine University • Barton Legum, American Bar Association • Miguel López Forastier, Covington & Burling, LLP • Vilawan Mangklatanakul, Department of International Economic Aff airs, Ministry of Foreign Aff airs, Th ailand THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 THURSDAY, • Margrete Stevens, King & Spalding

Intellectual Property Rights Interest Group Business Meeting 11:30 am – 1:00 pm Meeting Room 6

WILIG Luncheon: International Law and the Future of Peace 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Mt. Vernon Sponsored by the Women in International Law Interest Group and Cosponsored by the Government Attorneys Interest Group

Th e Prominent Woman in International Law Award is awarded annually by the Women in International Law Interest Group in recognition of a woman recipient’s contribution to the development of international law.

Honoree/Speaker: Diane Marie Amann, University of Georgia School of Law

Th e Emily and Ernest Woodruff Chair in International Law at the University of Georgia School of Law, Diane Marie Amann teaches Public International Law, International Criminal Law and the Laws of War. She also serves as the International Criminal Court Prosecutor’s Special Adviser on Children in Armed Confl ict. Th e author of more than four dozen HYPERLINK “http:// dianemarieamann.com/publications/” publications in English, French and Italian, Amann focuses her scholarship on the ways that national, regional and international legal regimes interact as they endeavor to combat atrocity and cross-border crime. She joined the Georgia Law faculty in 2011 from the University of California-Davis, where she was a professor of law, the founding director of the California International Law Center and a Martin Luther King Jr. Hall Research Scholar, and from which she received the Distinguished Teaching Award and the Homer Angelo Award for Outstanding Contributions to International Law. Amann is a past vice president of the American Society of International Law and past chair of the Section on International Law of the Association of American Law Schools. Additionally, the Section on International Law of the American Bar Association gave her the 2010 Mayre Rasmussen Award for the Advancement of Women in International Law. She is the founding contributor to IntLawGrrls blog, which published from 2007 to 2012.

36 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 37 well how will explore is panel do these began, where uprising er the Arab Business Meeting Business Law Interest Public for e Global Network ict over the ocean’s resources. Th resources. the ocean’s ict over Interest Group Interest Asli Bali, Asli Los California, Angeles of University the for concern of the Sea of the Law was born out of Convention Nations e United

Tamara Wittes, Saban Center, Brookings Institute Brookings Center, Saban Wittes, Tamara Th Tunis, UNOHCHR Nassar, Habib Foundation American New EastRanda Middle Institute; Slim, • • • – law international of the language by been accompanied have world in the Arab e convulsions CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: sheries. Th sheries. the Convention has fared. the Convention need for legal rules to avoid confl legal rules avoid to need for States are now exploiting all of the ocean’s resources--hydrocarbons, minerals, biodiversity, and and minerals, biodiversity, resources--hydrocarbons, the ocean’s all of exploiting now are States fi Moderator: LegalInternational Research is the Law the Sea of with Ocean New Coping Resources? How - 3:00 pm 1:30 pm 12, 13 & 14 Rooms Cosponsored by the International and Group the Sea of Sponsored by the Law Interest Environmental Law Group Interest Th accountability diplomats, of the protection intervention, outside governing the law rights, human the and law, international and law Islamic of crimes, the interaction historic and recent for aft years Two a sample. name to refugees, of rights the of some with A roundtable law? international issues of on stand governance in revolutions in which the ways of a picture East Middle policy and will paint law in international thinkers key outcomes. and debates shape to failed has succeeded and law international Speakers: – 3:00 pm 1:30 pm 10 & 11 Rooms Meeting Arab Revolutionary Spring, Change Law and International pm - 3:00 1:30 pm Salon South Interest Law Rule of and Justice Transitional the Group, Cosponsored Africa by the Interest Group, Interest Law Criminal the International Group, Interest Rights Human the Group, the and Group, Interest Professionals the New Group, Refugee Interest Law the International Group Interest the Arts and Heritage Cultural Moderators: Maria Gavouneli, University of Athens; Peter Prows, Briscoe Ivester & Bazel LLP Speakers: • David Balton, Offi ce of the Assistant Secretary for Oceans and Fisheries, U.S. State Department • Kristina Maria Gjerde, International Union for Conservation of Nature • Michael Lodge, International Seabed Authority • Tullio Scovazzi, University of Milano Bicocca THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 THURSDAY, Coff ee Break 3:00 pm – 3:15 pm

An Interview with a European Scholar: Alain Pellet 3:15 pm – 4:45pm South Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the European Society of International Law and the New Professionals Interest Group

Young scholars interview Professor Alain Pellet, a prominent and experienced international legal scholar who has lived through international law in the bi-polar world and has witnessed the changes since then through to the present. - What have been the themes and preoccupations? - What were his methods? - How does he assess the changes (bi-polarity vs multipolarity)?

Speaker: Alain Pellet, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense Interviewers: • Freya Baetens, Leiden University • Marko Milanovic, University of Nottingham • Antonios Tzanakopoulos, Oxford University

Unquenchable Th irst: the Outlook for Energy Disputes in Africa 3:15 pm – 4:45 pm Rooms 12, 13, & 14 CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Africa Interest Group, the International Environmental Law Interest Group, and the Dispute Resolution Interest Group, and the International Economic Law Interest Group

As national oil companies and multinational corporations have increasingly turned to new locations on the African continent to discover and develop its rich natural resources, the potential for disputes has rapidly increased. Th ese new investment fl ows and contemporary production-sharing agreements test international dispute resolution mechanisms, particularly given the ever-present public policy option of nationalization. New discoveries also threaten to reignite long dormant border disputes between countries, with would-be investors potentially caught in the crossfi re.

38 THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 39 siness Meeting siness Meeting rest Group Bu ce of the Regional Director for Eastern Mediterranean, Middle East Middle & Eastern Mediterranean, for Director the Regional ce of their potential and their motivations, changes, will assess the proposed is panel Richard Deutsch, Andrews Kurth LLP Kurth Andrews Deutsch, Richard Ariel Dulitzky, University of Texas School Law of Texas of University Ariel Dulitzky,

Breno de Souza Diaz de Costa, Interim Representative of Brazil to the Organization of of the Organization to Brazil of Representative de Souza de Costa, Diaz Breno Interim States American the Organization to Mexico of Representative Permanent García, Hernández Antonio Joel States American of School Law Aires Buenos of University Pinto, Monica Watch Rights Human of Americas Division Vivanco, Miguel José Africa, International Chamber of Commerce of Chamber Africa, International Energy Secretariat Charter Yodogawa, Noriko Rukia Baruti, Africa International Legal Awareness Legal Awareness Africa Baruti, International Rukia School Law of University York New LLP; Dorsey & Whitney REfraim Chalamish, LLP & Palmer Duckworth Burnet, Haigh, David Offi Houerbi, Sami • • • • • • • • • in Crisis Rights System Human e Inter-American of the Organization of regime monitoring rights the human system, e Inter-American CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: Moderator: American States (OAS), is facing the most serious crisis of its 50-odd year history. Several 50-odd history. year the its serious most crisis is facing of (OAS), States American the Inter-American of the powers limit to the OAS asked have governments American Latin Expression of Freedom for Rapporteur Special its and Rights Human on Commission in the rights protecting of the goal undercut severely believe would some that – restrictions Th hemisphere. the crisis. resolve needed to are steps what consider and impact, Speakers: Th 3:15 pm - 4:45 pm - 4:45 pm 3:15 pm 8 & 9 Rooms Law Rule of and Justice the Transitional Group, Interest Rights Cosponsored by the Human Group Refugee Interest Law the International and Group, Interest Th 3:15 pm - 4:45 pm 3:15 pm 5 Room Government Attorneys Inte Government Attorneys Moderator: Speakers: ASIL Annual General Meeting 3:15 pm – 4:45 pm Rooms 10 & 11

Th e annual business meeting of the Society, the agenda will include: • Election of ASIL Executive Council and Offi cers • Report of the AJIL Editors-in-Chief THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 2013 THURSDAY, • Presentation of the Deak Prize • Presentation of Interest Group Prizes • Amendment of the ASIL Constitution regarding Honorary Member criteria • A Discussion with new AJIL Editors in Chief Jose Alvarez and Benedict Kingsbury about the future of the Journal

Coff ee Break 4:45 pm – 5:00 pm

Retrospective on International Law in the First Obama Administration 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm North, South & Central Salons CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Government Attorneys Interest Group and the International Law in Domestic Courts Interest Group

Moderator: Donald Francis Donovan, Debevoise & Plimpton Speakers: • Harold Hongju Koh, Yale Law School • Michael H. Posner, New York University • Anne-Marie Slaughter, Princeton University

President’s Reception 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm Th e National Portrait Gallery, Eighth and F Streets, NW, Washington, DC 20001

Sponsored by Debevoise & Plimpton LLP

4040 MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA

Howard M. Holtzmann Research Center for the Study of International Arbitration and Conciliation

he Howard M. Holtzmann Research Center for the Study of TInternational Arbitration and Conciliation was established by the American Society of International (ASIL) to serve as an education and research forum for individuals interested in international dispute resolution. Building on the Society’s recognized expertise in this growing field, the Center will serve as an indispensable research and education resource, providing The ASIL Holtzmann Center is established in cutting-edge, expert information and analysis on significant issues honor of Judge Howard M. Holtzmann. Over and current developments in the international arbitration field. the course of his career, Judge Holtzmann Center activities will include: KDVPDGHHQRUPRXVFRQWULEXWLRQVWRWKH¿HOG of international arbitration and conciliation, t$PMMFDUJPOPGSFTFBSDINBUFSJBMTPOJOUFSOBUJPOBMBSCJUSBUJPO  and mentored scores of young lawyers JODMVEJOH+VEHF)PMU[NBOOTQFSTPOBMMJCSBSZBOEQBQFST ZRUNLQJLQWKH¿HOG+HZDVFHQWUDOWRWKH t"SFHVMBSQSPHSBNPGFWFOUT JODMVEJOHBTQFBLFSTFSJFTXJUI American Arbitration Association (AAA) work MFBEJOHmHVSFTBOEDPOUJOVJOHMFHBMFEVDBUJPODPVSTFTPOIPU with the Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm UPQJDTJOUIFmFMEBOE Chamber of Commerce to build an East- West bridge through international arbitration. t8PSLJOHHSPVQTBOEUBTLGPSDFTDPOWFOFEUPBEESFTTUIFLFZ Notable achievements include: service as a DIBMMFOHFTBOEFNFSHJOHJTTVFTSFMBUJOHUPJOUFSOBUJPOBM member of the U.S. delegation to the Arbitra- BSCJUSBUJPO tion Working Group of the UN Commission on International Trade Law (1974-2011), The Center is conveniently located at the Society’s headquarters which produced the UNCITRAL Arbitration and is open to everyone interested in learning more about Rules, the UNCITRAL Conciliation Rules, international arbitration and conciliation. and the UNCITRAL Model Law on Interna- tional Commercial Arbitration, and service as a Member of the Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal (1981-1994). For his pioneering work, the

King of Sweden inducted Judge Holtzmann FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 as a Commander of the Royal Order of the Polar Star in 2003. In 2005, he received the Silver Medal of Honor of Vienna, and in 2006, the AAA gave him its highest honor, the Peacemaker Award, for his “work to For more information about the Center and its upcoming further peace throughout the world.” Judge programs, please contact Holtzmann Center Director Holtzmann has been a member of ASIL Djurdja Lazic, [email protected]. since 1972. MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 41

Business Meeting Business iness Meeting Interest Group Interest st Group Bus cations for Alien Tort Statute-related litigation in the United States. States. in the United litigation Statute-related Tort Alien for cations April 5, 2013 5, April er, Northwestern University Northwestern er, Roger Alford, Notre Dame Law School Law Dame Notre Alford, Roger ee Break ee : John B. Bellinger, Arnold & Porter LLP Porter & Arnold Bellinger, B. John University Columbia Lori Damrosch, Scheff David University Hall Seton Elizabeth Wilson, 8:00 am – 9:00 am 8:00 am

Coff

• • • •

is panel anticipates the Supreme Court’s decision in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, which Petroleum, Dutch Royal in Kiobel v. decision Court’s the Supreme anticipates is panel CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours:

Executive Council Breakfast – 9:00 am 7:30 am Vernon Mt. only. Council Executive ASIL the of members Open to Friday, ResolutionDispute Intere – 9:00 am 7:30 am 7 Room Meeting Speakers may have major ramifi major have may Moderator: Th has question the central under the ATS, liability corporate Kiobel began as a case about While violations for lawsuits hear to courts U.S. allow Does the ATS become extraterritoriality. now the (or the decision discussion of A round-table soil? occur foreign on that law international of practitioners. academics and leading by will be conducted decision) likely Africa in International LawAfrica in International Courts Rights Litigation in U.S. and Human Kiobel, the ATS – 10:30 am 9:00 am Salon South the Africa Interest Group, in Domestic Courts Law Interest Cosponsored by the International Interest Law Criminal International the Group, Interest Law International the Private Group, Group Interest Rights the Human and Group, 8:30 am - 9:00 am 8:30 am 8 & 9 Rooms Meeting G20 and Beyond—Th e Infl uence of Emerging Countries on the Architecture of International Economic Law 9:00 am - 10:30 am Central Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the International Economic Law Interest Group and the Africa Interest Group FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY,

Th e recent global fi nancial crisis and the emergence of the BRICs and other developing countries have prompted reconsideration of the existing economic law architecture. Th e G20 has expanded its role in responding to the fi nancial crisis as a coordinative executive among international organizations, but would other existing structures be more appropriate? Perhaps a structure with an altogether new grouping of countries should be considered—one that refl ects the economic and political clout of the BRICs?

Moderator: Ilana Shulman, Offi ce of the General Counsel for Latin America, Legal and Compliance, Astellas US LLC Speakers: • William Burke -White, University of Pennsylvania Law School • Gisela Bolívar, Jiménez Romero y Asociados • Sonia E. Rolland, Northeastern University School of Law • James X. Zhan, Investment and Enterprise Division, United Nations Conference on Trade & Development

Th e EU as a Global Actor in a Multipolar World 9:00 am – 10:30 am North Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0

Th is panel explores Europe’s policies regarding international law in today’s multipolar world. How distinct is Europe’s normative agenda? Does the EU in the framework of its common foreign policy speak increasingly with one voice? Is there such a thing as an external legal policy of the EU? Are EU policies backed up by the projection of any serious power in the economic and military domain? Or is all this mere “lawfare” and an obnoxious hindrance to the US as the “indispensable power” of this world?

Moderator: Daniel Halberstam, Michigan Law School Speakers: • Piet Eeckhout, University College London • Andreas Paulus, University of Göettingen; Federal Constitutional Court of Germany • Ineta Ziemele, European Court of Human Rights

42 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 43 ict Group Interest Switzerland of airs ment, the new booksment, new span themes and Group eory Interest rst moment occurred in the immediate post-independent occurred in the immediate moment rst Schoolalo Law e fi e Chicago University, Loyola uo Gathii, in African international this new moment what appraise will critically is panel Andrew Clapham, Graduate Institute of International Studies International of Institute Graduate Clapham, Andrew James Th James

Faiza Patel, UN Mercenaries Working Group Working UN Mercenaries Patel, Faiza First Rights Human Roggensack, Meg III Rome of Sossai, University Mirko Aff Ministry Foreign of Zellweger, Valentin Uche Ewelukwa-Ofodile, University of Arkansas of University Ewelukwa-Ofodile, Uche Utah of University Erika George, es Salaam Dar of University Peter, Chris Maina Buff SUNY Mutua, Makau in African moment a new important represent ese presses leading books from • • • • • • • • Law Scholarship African of International Future and e Past Military Private and Security of e Regulation Contractors PMSCs may expand. to (PMSCs) continues military security and contractors private of e role CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: Moderator: concerns in Africa and international law including gender equality, economic integration and and integration economic equality, gender including law in Africa international and concerns Th criminal justice. means. scholarship law 9:00 am - 10:30 am am - 10:30 9:00 am 8 & 9 Rooms Interest Cosponsored Professionals New by the and Group Sponsored by the Africa Interest Th Legal the International and Group, Africa international on and been new books published have past, several important the recent In Th law. Th scholarship. law international published. were law period, several Africa International books the on last time that focusing and post-independence mo in the immediate Unlike Th 9:00 am - 10:30 am - 10:30 am 9:00 am 10 & 11 Rooms Law International the Private Group, Cosponsored by the Government Interest Attorneys Confl Society the Lieber Armed of and on the Law Group, Interest Moderator: Speakers: Speakers: Th Th territory its on state a third behalf of on operate and another, from recruit State, in one be situated What their regulation? PMSCs outpaced the use of Has State. a fourth of that on perhaps or domestic principles, voluntary self-regulation, of cons and the pros are what and is the status, binding internationally an of the negotiation or a model law, of the development regulation, instrument? Coff ee Break 10:30 AM – 10:45 AM

Unilateral Secession in a Multipolar World 10:45 am – 12:15 pm

FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY, South Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the International Refugee Law Interest Group

With political change sweeping through the Middle East as a result of the Arab Spring, military rule loosening in Burma/Myanmar and internal strife burgeoning in Mali, the specter of unilateral secession looms large. As the declaration of independence by Kosovo and the formation of the new state of South Sudan make clear, the unilateral declaration of independence by a region or province from an existing country raises diffi cult questions under international law. Th e panel has draft ed a hypothetical which will serve as the basis for its innovative approach to addressing contemporary secessions---which is available at .

Moderator: Bill Slomanson, Th omas Jeff erson School of Law Speakers: • Vanessa J. Jiménez, Public International Law and Policy Group, South Sudan Program • Marcelo Kohen, Graduate Institute of International & Developmental Studies, Geneva • Patrick Dumberry, University of Ottawa • Jure Vidmar, Oxford University, Institute of European and Comparative Law

China-Africa Investment Treaties and Dispute Settlement: A Piece of the Multipolar Puzzle 10:45 am – 12:15 am Central Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Africa Interest Group, the Law in the Pacifi c Rim Region Interest Group, the International Courts and Tribunals Interest Group, the International Economic Law Interest Group, and the Dispute Resolution Interest Group

Traditionally, bilateral investment treaties (BITs) refl ected the “West vs. Rest” power dynamic, whereby industrialized states protected their investments in developing countries. China, however, defi ed this trend, negotiating the second greatest number of BITs. Although those BITs historically emphasized defensive concerns, China has shift ed to protecting its investors abroad. With the growth of Chinese investment in Africa, the stronger protections and broader dispute resolution clauses now sought by China feature distinctly in the multipolar puzzle.

44 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 45 orts. How How orts. the Private the Private , Common the Secretariat, ce of ect of sanctioning by international institutions institutions international by sanctioning ect of e concept of universal jurisdiction and assess and jurisdiction universal of e concept Embassy of China, Washington, DC China, Washington, of Embassy ict Interest Group, the Women in International Law Law in International Women the Group, ict Interest ed their legislation in response to pressures both legal and both legal and pressures to in response ed their legislation orts? What is the deterrent eff is the deterrent What orts? Wenhua Shan, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Oxford Brookes University Brookes Oxford University, Jiaotong Xi’an Shan, Wenhua Maximo Langer, University of California, Los California, Angeles of University Langer, Maximo

Offi Division, Investment Kalonji, ierry Mutumbo Market for Eastern Southern Africa and for Market Huiping Chen, Department of International Economic Law, Xiamen University Law, Xiamen Economic International of Chen, Department Huiping Chen, Ministry Commerce, Fuli of Law School Transnational of University Peking Feldmen, Mark Th Richard Dicker, Human Rights Watch Rights Human Dicker, Richard Pittsburgh of University Jalloh, Charles State of Department Schaack, U.S. Beth Van University Wuhan Yee, Sienho • • • • • • • • these eff are ective international States, of level the international at will discuss is panel the interaction of in the application trends national and attitudes regional emerging will examine is panel CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: Domestic Treatment of Universal Jurisdiction Universal of Treatment Domestic – 12:15 pm 10:45 am Salon North Government Group, Courts in Domestic Law Interest Cosponsored by the International Group Interest Law Criminal the International Group, Attorneys Interest Speakers: Moderator: such as multilateral development banks on the private sector? the private on banks development as multilateral such organizations, NGOs and the private sector in their respective anti-corruption eff anti-corruption in their respective sector the private and NGOs organizations, universal jurisdiction. In recent years, many states have called for a reassessment of universal universal of a reassessment called for have states many years, recent In jurisdiction. universal modifi have some jurisdiction, and Th Th Moderator: in a Multipolar World Initiatives – 12:15 pm 10:45 am 8 & 9 Rooms Interest Law Economic International Group, Interest Law Cosponsored by the Anti-Corruption Group the Government Interest and Attorneys Group International Law Interest Group, the Transitional Justice and Rule of Law Interest Group, the Group, Interest Law Rule of and Justice the Transitional Group, Interest Law International Confl Society Armed Lieber of on the Law Group Interest Rights the Human and Group, Interest th of will discuss the future Panelists political. to the obligation and impunity prevent between the need to the tensions resolving for proposals sovereignty. respect national Speakers: eff Moderator: Susan Rose-Ackerman, Yale Law School Speakers: • Nicola Bonucci, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) • Pascale Dubois, World Bank • Claudia J. Dumas, Transparency International – USA • William Jacobson, Weatherford International FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY,

21st Century International Institutions: Lessons from Global Health Governance? 10:45 am – 12:15 am Rooms 10 & 11 CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Sponsored by the International Organizations Interest Group

Over the last decade, global health governance has emerged as an area of substantial innovation. In contrast to many international organizations, global health institutions are expanding participation in governance, adopting performance-based approaches, and building stronger links between global and national level governance. What lessons, if any, can be drawn for the broader challenges facing international organizations when it comes to fostering accountability and ensuring the provision of global public goods?

Moderator: Benedict Kingsbury, New York University Law School Speakers: • Gian Luca Burci, World Health Organisation • Jacob Katz Cogan, University of Cincinnati College of Law • David Gartner, Arizona State Univeristy Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law • Jennifer Prah Ruger, Yale University School of Public Health, School of Medicine

Arctic Law: Th e Challenges of Governance in the Changing Arctic 10:45 am – 12:15 pm Rooms 12, 13 & 14 CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the International Environmental Law Interest Group and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Interest Group

Th e Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the planet. Retreating ice is opening access to precious metals, to energy resources, and to new sea lanes. Panelists will debate whether the emerging structure of international environmental governance is capable of responding to the particular challenges of protecting a rapidly-changing Arctic Region.

46 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 47 cate of merit by by merit of cate liate Overseas Faculty and the William W. W. the William and Overseas Faculty liate International. He has been awarded honorary honorary has been awarded He International. uncheon: Criminalizing the Illegal Use of Force: uncheon: Criminalizing Force: the Illegal of Use terest Group L terest siness Meeting Group Bu Judge Bruno Simma, Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal Tribunal Claims Iran-U.S. Bruno Simma, Judge Shahram Dana, John Marshall Law School; and Charles Jalloh, University of of University Jalloh, Charles School; Law and Marshall John Dana, Shahram Donald Ferencz Donald Austen Parrish, Southwestern Law School Southwestern Parrish, Austen Joseph Weiler, New York University School of Law School of University York New Weiler, Joseph Benjamin Ferencz Benjamin Betsy Baker, Vermont Law School Law Vermont Betsy Baker, Montreal of Lalonde, University Suzanne Administration Atmospheric Oceanic and National Oppenheimer, Peter Law of College University National Australian Rothwell, Don • • • • Winner Medal A Discussion Luncheon: with Medal the 2013 Hudson e Hudson Moderator: European and Law International of as Professor began his academic career Bruno Simma Judge of the Faculty was Dean of 2003. He to 1973 from Munich of the University at Law Community was a visitor He universities. other many at has also taught 1997. He 1995 to from in Munich Law 1987 to from law of served School subsequently he Law as professor in 1986, where Michigan at 1997, he has been the Affi from of a member 1992, and Honoree/Speaker: 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm 12:30 pm Vernon Mt. Th CriminalLaw In International Moderators: Cook Global Law Professor. Judge Simma served as a judge on the International Court of Justice Court Justice of the served International Simma on as a judge Judge Cook Professor. Global Law the Iran-U.S. of Judge/Arbitrators neutral three of one 2012, he was appointed 2003-2012. In from in 1995 and Law, International of Academy the Hague twice at has lectured He Tribunal. Claims the of editor and is cofounder 1982. He in 1976 and Studies, of Director was twice its 2009, and Law, Society International of the European of a cofounder Law, International of Journal European de Droit the Institut of member associate an and as a certifi as well Glasgow, and Innsbruck Macerata, of the universities by degrees highesthonor, the Society’s of is the recipient 2013 He Law. the Society American International of Medal. Hudson O. the Manley Ben Prosecutor Ferencz Nuremberg with Former A Conversation – 2:30 pm 12:30 pm A Ballroom Congressional School Law of Pittsburgh Speaker: - 2:30 pm 12:30 pm 5 Room Meeting Moderator: Speakers: Discussant: Space Law Interest Th e Challenges for ASEAN: Th e South China Sea, Investment Protection and Myanmar 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm South Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Sponsored by the Law in Pacifi c Rim Region Interest Group and Cosponsored by the International Economic Law Interest Group FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY,

Th e Panel will discuss ASEAN legalization, institutionalization, dispute resolution and adoption of international legal norms; and explain the ASEAN situation in the context of a post-colonial failure to develop an appreciation for international law; as well as to diff erentiate between economic law issues and more politicized issues such as human rights, territory and the environment.

Moderator: Edmund Sim, Appleton & Luff Speakers: • Michael Ewing-Chow, Center for International Law (CIL), National University of Singapore • Arif Havas Oegroseno, Ambassador of Indonesia to the European Union • Tan Hsien-Li, Centre for International Law, National University of Singapore

Lieber Society on the Law of Armed Confl ict Interest Group Business Meeting 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm Meeting Rooms 12, 13 & 14

International Legal Th eory Interest Group Business Meeting 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm Meeting Rooms 10 & 11

Anti-Corruption Interest Group Business Meeting 12:30 pm - 2:00 pm Room 3

ASIL Southeast Interest Group Business Meeting 12:30 pm - 2:00 pm Rooms 8 & 9

48 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 49 nancial its is reviewing Bank e World several interest which spans is panel, nancing from actors such as China and Brazil is Brazil China and as such actors from nancing ce of Foreign Assets Control, U.S. Department of the Treasury of Department U.S. Control, Assets Foreign ce of nancial system, with the goal of requiring or pressuring global fi pressuring or requiring of the goal with system, nancial International Economic Law Interest Group Economic Interest Law International

Barry Carter, Georgetown University Law Center on Transnational Business and the and Business Transnational on Center Law University Georgetown Barry Carter, Edith Brown Weiss, Georgetown University Law Center Law University Georgetown Weiss, Brown Edith ee Break ee

ective – combating terrorism, preventing proliferation, and contributing to political political to contributing and proliferation, preventing terrorism, – combating ective Maya Lester, Brick Court Brick Chambers Lester, Maya Serena Rein Wiley Moe, Offi Szubin, Adam Jessica Evans, Human Rights Watch Rights Human Evans, Jessica Bank Lallas, World Peter Law of College Illinois of University Williams, Cynthia 2:00 pm -2:15pm 2:00 pm Coff • • • • • • fi project private and both public e rise of CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: Moderator: institutions to forego transactions with sanctioned countries and persons. Are these sanctions these sanctions Are persons. and countries sanctioned with transactions forego to institutions eff more – their sanctions with associated challenges the historical exacerbate do they simply Or, change? sanctioned designating of implications process the due and citizens ordinary on impact adverse persons? State of Department the U.S. of Subcommittee Law; Sanctions Advisory Speakers: Moderator: Th Th investments. public international the rules around changing their improve to under pressure are actors other and agencies aid bilateral banks, policies, and social and issues. Th environmental on performance own these developments. of import and the impact considers groups, Speakers: Regulating the Impacts of International Project Financing Project International of Impacts the Regulating pm – 2:00 12:30 am Salon Central the Private and Group Interest Law Environmental Cosponsored by the International International Law Group Interest Evolution of Economic Sanctions: Where Do We Stand with Stand FinancialSanctions? Economic of Do Sanctions:Evolution We Where – 3:45 pm 2:15 pm Salon South Cosponsored by the Although traditional trade sanctions are still used, economic sanctions are focusing increasingly increasingly focusing are sanctions economic used, still are trade sanctions traditional Although fi the international on Th e Changing Role of Regional Organizations in African Peace and Security 2:15 pm – 3:45 pm Central Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Africa Interest Group

FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY, Th is Panel will address the legal implications and international law challenges that arise as a result of: the changing relationship between the UN and the African Union (AU) in the African peace and security context; hybrid AU-UN peacekeeping operations; and the increasing role of subregional organizations such as ECOWAS. How does the changing role of regional organizations aff ect or reshape international law?

Moderator: Ademola Abass, United Nations University, Institute for Comparative Regional Integration Studies Speakers: • Th éodore Christakis, University of Grenoble • Sarah Nouwen, Cambridge University

Rethinking Private International Law: Th e Emergence of the “Private” 2:15 pm - 3:45 pm North Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Sponsored by the Private International Law Interest Group

Under the infl uence of globalization, public international law has opened up to private actors and private arrangements. Does this make private international law superfl uous? Or is private international law the future of the discipline? Is it true that the distinction between public and private international law no longer matters? Or is there something specifi c about private international law? Th e panel invites a discussion of these questions among representatives of both public and private international law.

Moderator: Rahim Moloo, Freshfi elds Bruckhaus Deringer Speakers: • Benedict Kingsbury, New York University School of Law • Julie Maupin, Duke University School of Law • Mathias Reimann, University of Michigan Law School • Peter Trooboff , Covington & Burling

Book Discussion: “Partly Laws Common to All Mankind”, Foreign Laws in American Courts, by Jeremy Waldron 2:15 pm - 3:45 pm Room 3 Moderator: Alexander Greenawalt, Pace Law School Speaker: Jeremy Waldron, New York University School of Law

50 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 51 c icts, from Mali to South Sudan, Sudan, South to Mali icts, from

the vitality questions is roundtable Refugees, for Commissioner the High ce of other and host refugees to persuade states cult to c Rim Region Interest Group and the Cultural Heritage Heritage the Cultural and Group c Rim Region Interest ce of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and Global Refugees and for Commissioner High Nations the United ce of Julian Ku, Hofstra University Hofstra Ku, Julian University Oxford S. Goodwin-Gill, Guy

Africa Bureau Agency Works Relief and Nations Reynolds, United Matthew Jacques DeLisle, University of Pennsylvania School of Law School of Pennsylvania of DeLisle, University Jacques School Law University Tsinghua Jia, Bing Bing Crisis Group International Klein-Ahlbrandt, Stephanie Initiative Rights Refugee International Clancy, Deirdre Offi Klug, Anja Group Migration Amsterdam of University Nollkaemper, André Offi Nations United Okoth-Obbo, George • • • • • • • • CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: How have traditional principles of non-interference and state sovereignty fared in the face of in the face of fared sovereignty state and non-interference of principles traditional have How Th in the world? engagement rise increasing and rapid China’s Moderator: diffi has become increasingly the 1990s, it Since Moderator: and the Arts Interest Group Interest the Arts and specifi upon drawing Chinese behavior, in contemporary these salience principles of and the UN Security trade, the and Council, change, climate rights, as human – such examples in the China Seas. South East and disputes territorial and maritime Speakers: Refugee Protection on Regional Perspectives – 3:45 pm 2:15 pm 8 & 9 Rooms Group Refugee Interest Law the International and Group Cosponsored by the Africa Interest confl internal current and recent Yet, persons. displaced externally international stronger the need for that shown have Syria recently more and Libya Somalia to arrangements Regional before. than greater if not as great is probably arrangements cooperation and approaches protection-oriented of the adoption ensure to response become a common have to contribute arrangements Do these regional environment. multipolar increasingly an to adapt standards? do they undermine or global protection strengthen Speakers: China and International Law China and International pm – 3:45 2:15 pm 13 & 14 12, Rooms in the Pacifi Cosponsored by the Law Th e Complex History of International Law 2:15 pm – 3:45 pm Rooms 10 & 11 CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the European Society of International Law, the Cultural Heritage and the Arts Interest Group, and the International Legal Th eory Interest Group FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY,

Th e history of international law has mainly been written as a history of rules developed in the European state system since the 16th century which then were spread to other continents and eventually the entire globe. Th e panel will ask whether and to what extent the Eurocentric story of international law has proven wrong and explore the relevance of extra-European experiences to the history of international law.

Moderator: Steve Charnovitz, George Washington University Law School Speakers: • Kinji Akashi, Keio University • Umut Özsu, University of Manitoba • Ileana Porras, University of Miami • Iain Scobbie, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

Coff ee Break 3:45 pm - 4:00 pm

Inaugural Charles N. Brower Lecture on International Dispute Resolution 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm North, Central & South Salons CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Dispute Resolution Interest Group, the International Courts and Tribunals Interest Group, and the Private International Law Interest Group

Moderator: Donald Donovan, Debevoise & Plimpton, LLC Lecturer: V.V. Johnny Veeder, Esq., QC

A member of Essex Court Chambers, and practicing at the English Bar from 1972 to date, V.V. Johnny Veeder specialises in all aspects of commercial law and international trade, including foreign investment and international commercial arbitration. He has appeared as advocate before the English courts in London and overseas in Hong Kong, Bermuda and Luxembourg; and as advocate or arbitrator in arbitration proceedings in London, Th e Hague, Paris, Brussels, Switzerland, Stockholm, Singapore, Hong Kong and the USA. He was the co- founder and has been General Editor of Arbitration International; is a member of the UK delegation to UNCITRAL; and is a Vice-President of the LCIA Court. Mr. Veeder will give the Society’s inaugural Charles N. Brower Lecture, named in honor of Judge Brower and his many contributions to our fi eld.

52 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 53 e ICC, ICC, e the International the International

Criminal e International iness Meeting iness Meeting Business Meeting Business p Business Meeting p Business rst permanent, treaty based, international based, international treaty permanent, rst Business Meeting Business Group Bus ms, established to help end impunity for the for end impunity help to established ms, Global Justice for Institute e Hague and Embassy, Netherlands e Royal ts Interest Interest Group Group Interest Law Interest Grou Law Interest Interest Group Interest

Criminal Tribunals for Mechanism Residual e International Abiodun Williams, President, Th President, Williams, Abiodun eodor Meron, President, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Yugoslavia, the former for Criminal Tribunal International President, Meron, eodor Fatou Bensouda, Prosecutor, International Criminal Court International Bensouda, Prosecutor, Fatou Th Th and • • CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: International Law and Technology International Transitional Justice and Rule of Justice Transitional 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm – 5:00 4:00 pm 5 Room Meeting International Disability Rights International 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm 4:00 pm 2 Room Meeting International Law in Domestic Cour International Moderator: 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm 4:00 pm 3 Room Meeting While community. the international to concern the most serious crimes of of perpetrators As mandate. its of the completion towards the ICTY working is now full capacity, at operating the Mechanism in 2010 the Security process, Council created this completion part of integral an both the ICTY carry of to functions essential (MICT), on Criminal Tribunals International for Th activities. ad hoc judicial conduct as to as well protection), as witness (such ICTR and expected is not and steadily, grow has seen activities its 10th Anniversary last year, its celebrating criminal law international of development decades of two soon. Marking fade anytime to the the ICTY of of and challenges successes and review the impact, to opportunity an provides the future. for lessons draw to and ICC, Speakers: criminal court, complementary to national syste national to criminal complementary court, Twenty Years of International Criminal Law: the ICTY the ICC and Beyond to From International of Years Twenty – 6:30 pm 5:15 pm Salons & South Central North, Yugoslavia the former for Tribunal the International ago, years twenty establishment its Since victims provided and criminal law international of the landscape changed (ICTY) irreversibly has experienced. they Th witnessed and the horrors voice to opportunity an 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm 4:00 pm 12, 13 & 14 Rooms Meeting Th the Hague, of Cosponsored by the City Group Interest Courts Tribunals and is the fi Statute, the Rome by Court governed (ICC), Members’ Reception 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm Congressional A & B

City of Th e Hague Reunion Reception 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 2013 FRIDAY, Mt. Vernon A Sponsored by the City of Th e Hague and co-hosted by the Hague Institute for Global Justice

Th e Hague is known all over the world as the ‘International City of Peace and Justice’. Currently Th e Hague is home to 140 international NGOs and 25 international organizations. Th e Hague stands for hope in places as diverse as Tripoli, Nairobi and Kabul. Hope for millions of citizens. Hope that the crimes infl icted on them will not remain unpunished. Hope for a peaceful future. All Annual Meeting participants who have been or still are part of Th e Hague endeavor, are invited to an inspiring reunion hosted by the City of Th e Hague. Having so many judicial experts with a history with Th e Hague together at the Annual Meeting, for instance because of a (former) position or a summer course in the Peace Palace, warrants a reunion. Th e Hague Reunion Reception is co-hosted by the Hague Institute for Global Justice. THIGJ was established by Th e Hague Academic Coalition, the City of Th e Hague, Th e Hague Conference on Private International Law and Th e Hague Centre for Strategic Studies, and is supported by the Dutch government. Th e Institute is dedicated to the promotion of knowledge of law and justice as the basis of and in relation to peace, justice and social and economic development.

Patrons’ and Other Major Contributors’ Reception 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm Mt. Vernon B

Remarks: • Donald Donovan, ASIL President • Rosalyn Higgins, ASIL Honorary President

Annual Dinner 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm South Salon

Presentation of the Society Honors and Awards • Manley O. Hudson Medal: Bruno Simma • Goler T. Butcher Medal: Dinah L. Shelton • Honorary Member: Arthur C. Chaskalson • Certifi cates of Merit • 2013 Arthur C. Helton Fellowship Award Winners

A Special Tribute to AJIL Editors in Chief Lori Damrosch and Bernard Oxman

Dessert and Dance Party with the International Law Student Association (ILSA) 10:00 pm - 12:00 am North Salon

54 MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA BRINGING THE WORLD TO YOUR CLASSROOM: The ASIL International Law Curriculum Series

advantage of these FREE resources, designed to help you introduce your students to international law, international legal institutions, and the United States’ role in their development. The International Law Curriculum Series includes four distinct modules, each with lesson plans, student handouts, links to video resources, supplemental materials, quizzes, and projects designed for two

45 minute class sessions. The modules include: SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 t5IF64$POTUJUVUJPOBOE*OUFSOBUJPOBM-BX t5IF3VMFTPG8BS'SPNUIF$JWJM8BS&SB-JFCFS$PEF UPUIF(FOFWB$POWFOUJPOT t5IF/VSFNCFSH5SJCVOBM+VTUJDFBOE"DDPVOUBCJMJUZ t-FTTPOT-FBSOFE$JWJM3JHIUTBOE)VNBO3JHIUTJOUIF64BOEUIF8PSME Download the complete set of ASIL’s International Law Curriculum Series online at www.asil.org/highschoolcurriculum/ MAIN PROGRAM AGENDA SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 55

was “gravity” of e notion School Law Marshall e John April 6, 2013 6, April Shahram Dana, Th Dana, Shahram ee Break Break ee

7:30 am - 9:00 am 7:30 am Margaret de Guzman, Temple University Beasley School Law of University Temple de Guzman, Margaret University McGill Megret, Fred University American Law, College of Washington Orentlicher, Diane University Darryl Queens Robinson,

Coff

• • • •

a Multipolar World? Between Can the ICC Navigate Law and Politics: e Tension Law Executive Association Meeting Committee e American the International of Branch guide the to able as a legal standard gravity of the concept of will assess the is panel viability be observed can world in the multipolar in our politics and law between e global tension CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours:

Interest Group Co-Chair Breakfast am – 9:00 7:30 am B Vernon Mt. Saturday, Moderator: operation of the ICC. of operation designed to be the litmus test for the reach of the Court’s authority to prosecute and punish. punish. and prosecute to authority the Court’s of the reach for test bedesigned to the litmus Th successes and shortcomings of the International Criminal Court. Th the International of shortcomings successes and Th 9:00 am - 10:30 am - 10:30 am 9:00 am Salon South the International Group, Interest Courts Tribunals and Cosponsored the International by the and Group, Interest Law in International the Women Group, Interest Law Criminal Group Interest Law Rule of and Justice Transitional Th 9:00 am – 12:00 pm 9:00 am 9 8 & Rooms Th Speakers: Multipolar Governance Across Environmental Treaty Regimes 9:00 am - 10:30 am Central Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Government Attorneys Interest Group and the International Environmental Law Interest Group

SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 SATURDAY, Multipolar governance is far from uniform across environmental treaty regimes. Why have some environmental treaties attracted sustained interest and involvement from a range of non-state actors and others perpetuated a state-centric structure? Are some environmental issues more conducive to state-based solutions? Th is roundtable investigates, and attempts to explain, the unevenness of multipolar governance across environmental treaty regimes.

Moderator: Mark Drumbl, Washington and Lee University Speakers: • Kim Diana Connolly, Buff alo Law School • David Downes, Offi ce of International Aff airs, U.S. Department of the Interior • Timo Koivurova, Arctic Center, University of Lapland • Katharina Kummer Peiry, Kummer EcoConsult

Th e American Approach to Treaties 9:00 am - 10:30 am North Salon CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Cultural Heritage and the Arts Interest Group, International Law in Domestic Courts Interest Group, and the Government Attorneys Interest Group

Th is roundtable considers the extent to which the United States takes a unique approach to treaty negotiation, ratifi cation, interpretation, and domestic application, and examines the impact of U.S. practices on its engagement with the international community. To the extent that American practices are “exceptional,” does this exceptionalism hinder the U.S.’s ability to engage eff ectively in an increasingly multilateral world? Are these features of U.S. engagement with treaties necessary to protect uniquely American interests and concerns?

Moderator: Sarah Cleveland, Columbia Law School Speakers: • Sue Biniaz, Offi ce of the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State • Alan Kessel, Offi ce of the Legal Adviser, Canadian Department of Foreign Aff airs and International Trade • Michael Mattler, Offi ce of the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State; former U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee

56 SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 57 inter- will address e panelists unter-balance dominant players in key regions. regions. in key players dominant unter-balance y stalled, regional trade agreements (RTAs) (RTAs) trade agreements regional y stalled, s between negotiating high standards and attracting diverse diverse attracting and high standards negotiating s between International Economic Law Interest Group Economic Interest Law International

Mark Wu, Harvard Law School Law Harvard Wu, Mark

Manuel Gonzalez-Sáenz, Facio & Cañas, former Minister of Foreign Trade of Costa of Rica; Trade Foreign of Minister & Cañas, former Facio Gonzalez-Sáenz, Manuel Nations Costa of the United Rica to Ambassador former Moore, Michael Ambassador Former States, the United to Zealand Ambassador New Zealand Prime Minister New Former General and WTO Director Representative Trade U.S. former LLP; Brown Mayer Schwab, Susan • • • Law of and its Projections the Rule on e 2012 UN Declaration Landscape with the Trade Agreements: (Re-)Shaping Regional Trade of e Proliferation the facing opportunities and the challenges will analyze session Group e UN21 Interest CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: related themes involving UN and state´s practice regarding human rights in situations of political political of in situations rights human regarding practice state´s UN and themes involving related and national by about brought the contributions and development of the demands turmoil, courts. international implementation of the rule of law worldwide, as streamlined by the 2012 UN General Assembly the 2012 UN General Assembly by as streamlined worldwide, the rule law of of implementation the National at Law of the Rule on the General Assembly of Meeting the High-level of Declaration 2012 (A/RES/67/1). Th 24 September Levels of International and Th 9:00 am - 10:30 am 9:00 am 10 & 11 Rooms Cosponsored by the Government Interest and Attorneys Group Sponsored by the UN21 Interest Criminal the International and Group, Interest Law Rule of and Justice the Transitional Group, Law Group Interest Moderator: Th Developing countries are using RTAs to seek stronger voices and greater advantages on the on advantages greater and voices seek to stronger RTAs using are countries Developing in comparison leverage face risks: decreased negotiating participants all RTA Yet, globalstage. trade-off and negotiations bilateral to membership. Speakers: With multilateral trade negotiations seemingl trade negotiations multilateral With RTAs using are players Major system. trading multipolar the increasingly into insight provide co to ties and political/economic strengthen to Multilateralism on Pause on Multilateralism am - 10:30 9:00 am B Vernon Mt. Cosponsored by the Th Moderator: Hans Corell, Former Under-Secretary for Legal Aff airs and the Legal Counsel of UN, and Former Ambassador Ministry of Foreign Aff airs, Sweden Speakers: • Simon Chesterman, National University of Singapore Faculty of Law • Erika de Wet, Institute for International and Comparative Law in Africa, University of Pretoria • Clemens Feinäugle, Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for International, European and SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 SATURDAY, Regulatory Procedural Law • August Reinisch, University of Vienna Faculty of Law • Sheelagh Stewart, Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery of the United Nations Development Programme

New Voices Panel: Human Rights 9:00 am – 10:30 am Rooms 12, 13 & 14 CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 Cosponsored by the Human Rights Interest Group, the New Professionals Interest Group, the Women in International Law Interest Group, the Anti-Corruption Law Interest Group, and the International Legal Th eory Interest Group

Moderator: Dinah Shelton, George Washington University Law School Speakers: • Chelsea Purvis, Yale Law School Minority Rights Group International, London, “Africa as a Generator of International Human Rights Law” • Moria Paz, Stanford Law School, “Human Rights and the Tower of Babel; A Critique of the International Legal Regime for the Protection of Language Diversity” • Andy Spalding, University of Richmond School of Law, “Freedom from Corruption: Th e New Human Right?” • Katharine Young, Australian National University School of Law, “Th e New Economic and Social Rights”

Coff ee Break 10:30 am - 11:00 am

58 SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 2013 59 is s University s nance. Jose Alvarez, New York University School of Law School of University York New Alvarez, Jose Judge Bruno Simma, Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal Claims Iran-U.S. Bruno Simma, Judge Court Justice of International Xue, Hanqin Judge Tuft School Diplomacy, of Fletcher Trachtman, P. Joel • • • CLE Credit Hours: 1.5/2.0 CLE Credit Hours: Two opposing global trends raise important questions about the future of international law, law, international of the future about questions important raise global trends opposing Two the complexity scale and hand, On one global governance. and institutions international undermining institutions, and law for the demand is increasing interaction international of states other and powers emerging hand, understood. On the other as traditionally sovereignty Th sovereignty. state of interpretation expansive an reinforce to tend policies that pursuing are rights, as human such areas, functional in various out as they those play trends will explore panel fi trade and intervention, Closing Plenary: Global Governance, State Sovereignty, and the Future of International Law International of the Future and Closing Plenary: Sovereignty, Global Governance, State pm - 12:30 11:00 am Salons & Central South North, Environmental International the and Group Cosponsored by the Government Interest Attorneys Law Group Interest Speakers: Moderator: New

For more information, 30-day free trials for online products (institutions only), consortia deals and other pricing options, contact the Brill Sales Department at [email protected]

Handbook of WTO/GATT Dispute Settlement The Hague Academy Collected Courses Online / Online Recueil des cours de l’Académie de la Haye en ligne an essential resource for trade law practitioners that want to navigate discloses online access to over 80 years of the history of international and quickly master complex WTO/GATT reports spanning hundreds law to students and researchers around the world. of pages in length. Human Rights Documents Online International Law & World Order provides access to an ever growing, authoritative collection of Human Weston’s & Carlson’s Basic Documents Rights Documents from the collection edited by Human Rights Internet brings together all signifijicant documentary sources of international in Ottawa. law, arranged according to the categories in which international law has developed. Foreign Law Guide (FLG) is an online only database containing information on sources International Maritime Boundaries Online of foreign law in over 170 jurisdictions. is the ultimate guide to international maritime boundaries.

Securing Dignity and Freedom Diplomatic and Judicial Means through Human Rights of Dispute Settlement

Article 22 of the Universal Declaration Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, of Human Rights Marcelo G. Kohen, and Jorge E. Viñuales

Janelle M. Diller

This volume examines the origins of the article The volume offfers an assessment of the of the Declaration that introduced the purpose interactions between diplomatic and judicial of economic, social and cultural rights in this means of settling international disputes in way and recognized that every member of selected areas: territorial questions, international society is entitled to their realization through criminal law, international trade law, investment national efffort and international cooperation. arbitration and human rights. It includes contributions from some of the world’s leading academics and practitioners.

· December 2011 ‡2FWREHU · ISBN 978 90 04 20939 8 ‡,6%1 · Hardback (xii, 232 pp.) ‡+DUGEDFN SS · The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 3 ‡/LVWSULFH(8586

Visit Brill | Nijhofff at the ASIL Exhibits receive special discounts and information about our publication program Forcible Displacement International Maritime Security Law Throughout the Ages James Kraska and Raul Pedrozo Towards an International Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Forcible Displacement This title defijines an emerging interdisciplinary fijield of law and policy comprised of norms, legal Grant Dawson and Sonia Farber regimes, and rules to address today’s hybrid threats to the global order of the oceans This book analyses the anthropological, historical, and legal contours of the crime of ‡0DUFK ‡,6%1 forcible displacement and proposes specifijic ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 measures that the international community can adopt in order to prevent and/or punish Introduction to International the perpetration of the crime in the future. Criminal Law, 2nd Revised Edition

‡-XO\ M.Cherif Bassiouni ‡,6%1 ‡+DUGEDFN [YLSS ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 Written by one of the world’s pioneers and ‡,QWHUQDWLRQDO+XPDQLWDULDQ/DZ6HULHV leading authorities on international criminal law, this text book covers the history, nature, What Is War? and sources of international criminal law; the An Investigation in the Wake of 9/11 ratione personae; ratione materiae—sources of substantive international criminal law; (GLWHGE\Mary Ellen O’Connell the indirect enforcement system; the direct enforcement system; the function of the The meaning of armed conflict is reported on international criminal court; rules of procedure by prominent international law scholars from and evidence applicable to international criminal four continents together with perspectives by proceedings; and the future of international military historians, soldiers, just war scholars, criminal law. This textbook is fully updated, political scientists, peace studies scholars, comprehensive, easy to read, and ideally suited and war correspondents, offfering a unique for classroom use. interdisciplinary exploration.

· November 2012 Ã0D\ Ã,6%1 · ISBN 978 90 04 17234 0 Ã3DSHUEDFN F[[[YLSS Ã+DUGEDFN [[LYSS Ã,QWHUQDWLRQDO&ULPLQDO/DZ6HULHV Ã,QWHUQDWLRQDO+XPDQLWDULDQ/DZ6HULHV

The Law Reports of the Special Court International Environmental Law for Sierra Leone (2 vols) and Policy for the 21st Century Volume 1: Prosecutor v. Brima, Kamara 2nd Revised Edition and Kanu (The AFRC Case) Ved P. Nanda and George (Rock) Pring (GLWHGE\Charles C. Jalloh and Simon M. Meisenberg This, 2nd Revised Edition, provides a fresh, comprehensive, and in-depth analysis of the The book, which is only the fijirst in a series of immense and challenging fijield of IEL, perfect edited law reports that will capture the entire for the needs of students, scholars, professionals, jurisprudential legacy of the tribunal, fijills the NGOs, and lay readers alike. The 1982 Law of the Sea gap for a single and authoritative reference Convention at 30 source of the tribunal’s jurisprudence. ‡2FWREHU ‡,6%1 Successes, Challenges and New Agendas ‡+DUGEDFN SS ‡1RYHPEHU ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 David Freestone ‡,6%1 ‡,QWHUQDWLRQDO(QYLURQPHQWDO/DZ ‡+DUGEDFN SS7ZRYROXPHVHWZLWK&'520 ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 This volume offfers twenty essays by renowned Law of the Sea scholars, published to mark the 30th Anniversary of the adoption of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

‡-DQXDU\ ‡,6%1 ‡3DSHUEDFN [YLLLSS ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 Cultural Heritage, Cultural Rights, Filling Regulatory Gaps in High Seas The 2010 Nagoya Protocol on Access Cultural Diversity Fisheries and Benefijit-sharing in Perspective New Developments in International Law Discrete High Seas Fish Stocks, Deep-sea Implications for International Law and Fisheries and Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems Implementation Challenges (GLWHGE\Silvia Borelli, University of Bedfordshire, and Federico Lenzerini, University of Siena Yoshinobu Takei Elisa Morgera, Matthias Buck and Elsa Tsioumani

This volume explores the recent evolution of This book investigates the regime of high seas This book analyses the implications of this cultural heritage law which has resulted in the fijisheries from the perspective of international innovative environmental treaty for diffferent emergence of a new international conscience, law and considers whether there are regulatory areas of international law, and its implementation rooted in the awareness that cultural heritage gaps and, if so, how they should be fijilled. challenges in various regions and from the represents a holistic notion strongly connected perspectives of various stakeholders. with the identity of peoples as well with ‡0DUFK ‡,6%1 ‡1RYHPEHU individual and collective human rights. ‡+DUGEDFN ‡,6%1 ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 ‡+DUGEDFN ;/,, ‡3XEOLFDWLRQVRQ2FHDQ'HYHORSPHQW Ã-XO\ ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 · ISBN 978 90 04 22839 9 ‡/HJDO6WXGLHVRQ$FFHVVDQG%HQHÀWVKDULQJ · Hardback (xx, 440 pp.) Ã/LVWSULFH(8586 Excessive Maritime Claims Ã6WXGLHVLQ,QWHUFXOWXUDO+XPDQ5LJKWV Third Edition Beyond Territoriality J. Ashley Roach and Robert W. Smith Towards a Chinese Civil Code Transnational Legal Authority in an Age of Globalization Comparative and Historical Perspectives this third, revised edition, is designed for law of the sea and maritime law specialists. Coverage Günther Handl, Joachim Zekoll and Peer Zumban- (GLWHGE\Lei Chen&LW\8QLYHUVLW\RI+RQJ.RQJ sen and C.H. (Remco) van Rhee0DDVWULFKW8QLYHUVLW\ includes current afffairs in maritime law such as submarine cables, polar areas, environmental This book traces the evolution of transnational protection, sovereign immunity and sunken Currently, China is drafting its new Civil Code. legal authority in the course of globalization. ships, and maritime law enforcement, maritime Against this background, the Chinese legal Representative case studies buttress its security, proliferation of weapons of mass community has shown a growing interest in conclusion that today transnational authority destruction by sea, piracy, and protection of various legal and legislative ideas from around is multifaceted, a phenomenon that renders underwater cultural heritage. the world. This book aims at providing the unreliable the concepts of territoriality/ necessary historical and comparative legal ‡-XQH extraterritoriality as global governance markers. perspectives. The book addresses the following ‡,6%1 topics: property law, contract law, tort law and ‡+DUGEDFN /;;SS ‡2FWREHU ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 civil procedure. ‡,6%1 ‡3XEOLFDWLRQVRQ2FHDQ'HYHORSPHQW ‡+DUGEDFN [YLLLSS ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 ‡1RYHPEHU ‡4XHHQ0DU\6WXGLHVLQ,QWHUQDWLRQDO/DZ ‡,6%1 ‡+DUGEDFN [LYSS ‡/LVWSULFH(8586 ‡&KLQHVHDQG&RPSDUDWLYH/DZ6HULHV

Visit Brill | Nijhofff at the ASIL Exhibits receive special discounts and information about our publication program New

New

The Journal of World The Korean Journal of International International Human Rights Investment & Trade and Comparative Law Law Review

For more information: brill.com/JWIT For more information: brill.com/KJIC For more information: brill.com/HRLR

This journal is the recognized forum where the The Korean Society of International Law (KSIL), This bi-annual yearly peer-reviewed journal most current issues concerning foreign direct one of the largest academic societies in Asia, aims to stimulate research and thinking on investment are debated: arbitration in investment is launching a new international journal contemporary human rights issues, problems, disputes, bilateral and multilateral investment entitled the Korean Journal of International and challenges and policies. It is particularly treaties, compensation in case of expropriation, Comparative Law (KJIC). The journal will not interested in soliciting papers, whether in the analysis of investment flows and their efffect, only publish articles concerning general issues legal domain or other social sciences, that are as well as the WTO trade issues which afffect of international and comparative law but also unique in their approach and which seek to investment. present research with Asian and particularly address poignant concerns of our times. Korean perspectives in the fijields of international and comparative law. The journal will serve Journal of the History of International as a medium which encourages thoughtful Nordic Journal of International Law Law / Revue d’histoire du droit scholarly attention to a wide range of subjects Acta scandinavica juris gentium international and to developing research in international For more information: brill.com/NORD For more information: brill.com/JHIL and comparative law in Korea, Asia and the international community. Established in 1930, the Nordic Journal of This journal aims to contribute to the efffort International Law has remained the principal to make intelligible the international legal European Journal of Comparative forum in the Nordic countries for the scholarly past, to stimulate interest in the whys, the Law and Governance exchange on legal developments in the whats and wheres of international legal international and European domains. development,without projecting present For more information: brill.com/EJCL relationships upon the past, and to promote the application of a sense of proportion to the study of This journal publishes top-level academic Global Responsibility to Protect current international legal problems. contributions in English that explore the phenomena of law and governance from a For more information: brill.com/GR2P comparative perspective. It includes comparative This journal is the premier journal for the study The Law & Practice of International studies from diffferent fijields of law and regulation and practice of the responsibility to protect (R2P). Courts and Tribunals as well as multi-disciplinary studies on societal A Practitioners’ Journal governance issues. Comparative studies involving non-European countries are welcome when For more information: brill.com/LAPE they deal with topics relevant also for European science and society. All contributions will be Each issue of LAPE will give you the latest subject to double-blind peer review. developments with respect to the preparation, adoption, suspension, amendment and revision of Rules of Procedure as well as statutory and internal rules and other related matters. ‡™‹–Ž‡•ˆ”‘ ƒ”–—„Ž‹•Š‹‰ Hart Publishing welcomes you to their book exhibit at the 107th ASIL annual meeting where we are pleased to offer a special conference discount on all of our international law titles. Please come and talk to our representatives to get information about our titles and publishing activities.

Democratic Statehood in The Interception of International Law Vessels on the High Seas Š‡‡”‰‡ ‡‘ˆ‡™–ƒ–‡•‹ ‘–‡’‘”ƒ”›ŠƒŽŽ‡‰‡•–‘–Š‡ ‘•–Ǧ‘Ž†ƒ””ƒ –‹ ‡ ‡‰ƒŽ”†‡”‘ˆ–Š‡ ‡ƒ• Jure Vidmar Efthymios Papastavridis Š‹•„‘‘ƒƒŽ›•‡•–Š‡‡‡”‰‹‰’”ƒ –‹ ‡‹–Š‡’‘•–Ǧ‘Ž† Š‡ƒ‹‘ˆ–Š‹•„‘‘‹•–‘ƒ††”‡••–Š‡‹–‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽŽ‡‰ƒŽ ƒ”‡”ƒ‘ˆ–Š‡ ”‡ƒ–‹‘‘ˆƒ†‡‘ ”ƒ–‹ ’‘Ž‹–‹ ƒŽ•›•–‡ƒŽ‘‰™‹–Š–Š‡ ”‡ƒ–‹‘ “—‡•–‹‘•ƒ”‹•‹‰ˆ”‘–Š‡̵”‹‰Š–‘ˆ˜‹•‹–‘–Š‡Š‹‰Š•‡ƒ•̵‹–Š‡ʹͳ•– ‡–—”›Ǥ ‘ˆ‡™•–ƒ–‡•ǤŠ‡‡š‹•–‹‰Ž‹–‡”ƒ–—”‡‡‹–Š‡”–‡†•–‘ ‘ˆŽƒ–‡•‡ŽˆǦ†‡–‡”‹ƒ–‹‘ –„‡‰‹•™‹–ŠƒŠ‹•–‘”‹ ƒŽƒ†–Š‡‘”‡–‹ ƒŽ‡šƒ‹ƒ–‹‘‘ˆ–Š‡ˆ”ƒ‡™‘” ƒ††‡‘ ”ƒ ›‘”†‹•‹••‡•–Š‡Ž‡‰ƒŽ”‡Ž‡˜ƒ ‡‘ˆ–Š‡‡‡”‰‹‰’”ƒ –‹ ‡‘–Š‡ —†‡”Ž›‹‰‹–‡” ‡’–‹‘ǤŠ‹•Š‹•–‘”‹ ƒŽ•—”˜‡›‹ˆ‘”•–Š‡”‡ƒ‹†‡”‘ˆ–Š‡ „ƒ•‹•–Šƒ–†‡‘ ”ƒ ›‹•‘–ƒ•–ƒ–‡Š‘‘† ”‹–‡”‹‘Ǥ— Šƒ”‰—‡–•ƒ”‡•‹’Ž‹•–‹ Ǥ ™‘”ǡ™Š‹ Š–Š‡Ž‘‘•ƒ––Š‡Ž‡‰ƒŽˆ”ƒ‡™‘”‘ˆ–Š‡”‹‰Š–‘ˆ˜‹•‹–ǡ Š‹•„‘‘†‡‘•–”ƒ–‡•–Šƒ–˜‹ƒ–Š‡”‹‰Š–‘ˆ•‡ŽˆǦ†‡–‡”‹ƒ–‹‘–Š‡Žƒ™‘ˆ ‘–‡’‘”ƒ”› ŠƒŽŽ‡‰‡•–‘–Š‡–”ƒ†‹–‹‘ƒŽ”‹‰Š–ǡ‹–‡”ˆ‡”‡ ‡‘–Š‡Š‹‰Š•‡ƒ• •–ƒ–‡Š‘‘†”‡“—‹”‡•ˆ‘”•–ƒ–‡ ”‡ƒ–‹‘–‘„‡ƒ†‡‘ ”ƒ–‹ ’”‘ ‡••ǡ„—––Šƒ––Š‹• ˆ‘”–Š‡ƒ‹–‡ƒ ‡‘ˆ‹–‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽ’‡ƒ ‡ƒ†•‡ —”‹–›ǡ‹–‡”ˆ‡”‡ ‡•–‘ ”‡“—‹”‡‡–•Š‘—Ž†‘–„‡‹–‡”’”‡–‡†–‘‘„”‘ƒ†Ž›ǤŠ‡†‡‘ ”ƒ–‹ ’”‘ ‡•• ƒ‹–ƒ‹–Š‡̵„‘—•ƒ‰‡̵‘ˆ–Š‡‘ ‡ƒ•ȋƒ˜‹‰ƒ–‹‘ƒ†ˆ‹•Š‹‰Ȍǡ’‹”ƒ ›Œ—”‡ ‹–Š‹• ‘–‡š–‰‘˜‡”•‹†‡’‡†‡ ‡”‡ˆ‡”‡†ƒƒ††‘‡•‘–‹–‡”ˆ‡”‡™‹–Š ‰‡–‹—ƒ† —””‡– ‘—–‡”Ǧ’‹”ƒ ›‘’‡”ƒ–‹‘•‘ˆˆ–Š‡ ‘ƒ•–‘ˆ‘ƒŽ‹ƒǡ–Š‡ –Š‡ Š‘‹ ‡‘ˆƒ’‘Ž‹–‹ ƒŽ•›•–‡Ǥ ’”‘„Ž‡•’‘•‡†„›‹ŽŽ‡‰ƒŽǡ—”‡‰—Žƒ–‡†ƒ†—”‡’‘”–‡†ˆ‹•Š‹‰ǡ‹–‡”†‹ –‹‘ Jure Vidmar‹•ƒ‡˜‡”Š—Ž‡ƒ”Ž›ƒ”‡‡” ‡ŽŽ‘™‹–Š‡ ƒ —Ž–›‘ˆƒ™ƒ†ƒ ‘’‡”ƒ–‹‘•–‘ ‘—–‡”†”—‰ƒ†’‡‘’Ž‡–”ƒˆˆ‹ ‹‰ǡƒ†”‡ ‡–‹–‡” ‡’–‹‘ ‡•‡ƒ” Š ‡ŽŽ‘™‘ˆ– ‘Š̵•‘ŽŽ‡‰‡ǡ‹˜‡”•‹–›‘ˆšˆ‘”†Ǥ ‘’‡”ƒ–‹‘•‹–Š‡‡†‹–‡””ƒ‡ƒ‡ƒ‘”‰ƒ‹•‡†„› Ǥ Mar 2013 254pp Hbk 9781849464697 £65 / US$130 Efthymios Papastavridis‹•ƒ’ƒ”–Ǧ–‹‡ƒ™‡ –—”‡”ƒ––Š‡ ‹˜‡”•‹–›‘ˆŠ”ƒ ‡Ǥ Feb 2013 365pp Hbk 9781849461832 £65 / US$130 The Proposed Nordic Saami Convention The Occupation of Iraq: Volume 2 ƒ–‹‘ƒŽƒ† –‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽ‹‡•‹‘•‘ˆ Š‡ˆˆ‹ ‹ƒŽ‘ —‡–•‘ˆ–Š‡‘ƒŽ‹–‹‘ †‹‰‡‘—•”‘’‡”–›‹‰Š–• Edited by Nigel Bankes and Timo Koivurova ”‘˜‹•‹‘ƒŽ—–Š‘”‹–›ƒ†–Š‡ ”ƒ“‹ ‘˜‡”‹‰‘— ‹Ž Stefan Talmon Š‹• ‘ŽŽ‡ –‹‘‘ˆ‡••ƒ›•‡š’Ž‘”‡•–Š‡ƒ–‹‘ƒŽƒ† ‹–‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽ†‹‡•‹‘•‘ˆ‹†‹‰‡‘—•’”‘’‡”–›”‹‰Š–•ƒ†–Š‡ †”ƒˆ– Š‹•˜‘Ž—‡‘ˆ†‘ —‡–• ‘˜‡”•–Š‡‘ —’ƒ–‹‘‘ˆ ”ƒ“ ‘˜‡–‹‘™Š‹ Š”‡ ‘‰‹•‡•–Š‡ƒƒ‹ƒ•‘‡’‡‘’Ž‡†‹˜‹†‡†„›‹–‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽ ˆ”‘–Š‡’Žƒ‹‰•–ƒ‰‡•‘ˆ–Š‡‹˜ƒ•‹‘‘ˆ ”ƒ“‹‡ƒ”Ž› „‘—†ƒ”‹‡•Ǥ ʹͲͲʹ–‘–Š‡–”ƒ•ˆ‡”‘ˆ‰‘˜‡”‹‰ƒ—–Š‘”‹–›–‘–Š‡ ”ƒ“‹ –‡”‹ ‘˜‡”‡–‘ʹͺ —‡ʹͲͲͶǤŠ‹• ‘ŽŽ‡ –‹‘ƒ” Š‹˜‡•–Š‡•‡‹’‘”–ƒ– Nigel Bankes ‹•ƒ”‘ˆ‡••‘”‘ˆƒ™ƒ––Š‡‹˜‡”•‹–›‘ˆƒŽ‰ƒ”›ǡŽ„‡”–ƒǡƒƒ†ƒǤ †‘ —‡–•ˆ‘”ˆ—–—”‡—•‡ƒ†ƒ‡•–Š‡‡ƒ•‹Ž›ƒ ‡••‹„Ž‡–‘”‡•‡ƒ” Š‡”•ƒ† Timo Koivurova ‹•ƒ”‡•‡ƒ” Š”‘ˆ‡••‘”ƒ†‹”‡ –‘”‘ˆ–Š‡‘”–Š‡” ’”‘ˆ‡••‹‘ƒŽ•Ǥ •–‹–—–‡ˆ‘”˜‹”‘‡–ƒŽƒ†‹‘”‹–›ƒ™ǡ” –‹ ‡–”‡ǡ‹˜‡”•‹–›‘ˆ Stefan Talmon ƒ’Žƒ†ǡ‘˜ƒ‹‡‹ǡ ‹Žƒ†Ǥ ‹•‹”‡ –‘”ƒ––Š‡ •–‹–—–‡‘ˆ—„Ž‹  –‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽƒ™ǡ ‹˜‡”•‹–›‘ˆ‘ǡƒ†—’‡”—‡”ƒ”› ‡ŽŽ‘™‘ˆ–Ǥ‡̵•‘ŽŽ‡‰‡ǡšˆ‘”†Ǥ Jan 2013 436pp Hbk 9781849462723 £55 / US$110 Feb 2013 1572pp Hbk 9781841136424 £80 / US$160

Transnational Terrorism and State Accountability Arbitration in China ‡™Š‡‘”›‘ˆ”‡˜‡–‹‘ ‡‰ƒŽƒ†—Ž–—”ƒŽƒŽ›•‹• Vincent-Joël Proulx Kun Fan "It behoves all scholars and practitioners of "What distinguishes this work from other books international law with an interest in combating on international arbitration is its interdisciplinary international terrorism to consider the proposals perspective and comparative approach...this outlined in this book." book makes a remarkable contribution to the From the Foreword by Judge Bruno Simma, International Court of Justice understanding of arbitration in China and transnational arbitration ˜‡”›–ƒ–‡Šƒ•ƒ‘„Ž‹‰ƒ–‹‘–‘’”‡˜‡––‡””‘”‹•–ƒ––ƒ •‡ƒƒ–‹‰ˆ”‘‹–• in general."From the Foreword by Gabrielle Kaufmann-Kohler –‡””‹–‘”›ǤŠ‹•’”‘’‘•‹–‹‘•–‡•ˆ”‘˜ƒ”‹‘—•—Ž–‹Žƒ–‡”ƒŽƒ‰”‡‡‡–•ƒ† ”‹––‡ˆ‘”‹–‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽ„—•‹‡••’‡‘’Ž‡ǡŽƒ™›‡”•ǡƒ ƒ†‡‹ •ƒ†•–—†‡–•ǡ ‡ —”‹–›‘— ‹Ž”‡•‘Ž—–‹‘•ǤŠ‹••–—†›‡šŠƒ—•–‹˜‡Ž›ƒ††”‡••‡•–Š‡• ‘’‡ –Š‹•„‘‘‰‹˜‡•–Š‡”‡ƒ†‡”ƒ—‹“—‡‹•‹‰Š–‹–‘ƒ”„‹–”ƒ–‹‘’”ƒ –‹ ‡‹Š‹ƒǡ ‘ˆ–Š‹•‘„Ž‹‰ƒ–‹‘‘ˆ’”‡˜‡–‹‘ƒ†–Š‡Ž‡‰ƒŽ ‘•‡“—‡ ‡•ˆŽ‘™‹‰ˆ”‘‹–• „ƒ•‡†‘ƒ ‘„‹ƒ–‹‘‘ˆ–Š‡‘”‡–‹ ƒŽƒƒŽ›•‹•ƒ†’”ƒ –‹ ƒŽ ˜‹‘Žƒ–‹‘ǡ•‘ƒ•–‘’”‘˜‹†‡‰”‡ƒ–‡” Žƒ”‹–›‘‰‘˜‡”‡–•̵ ‘—–‡”–‡””‘”‹• ‹•‹‰Š–•Ǥ †—–‹‡•ƒ†–‘‡Šƒ ‡–ƒ–‡ƒ ‘—–ƒ„‹Ž‹–›ˆ‘”’”‡˜‡–ƒ„Ž‡™”‘‰•Ǥ Kun Fan ‹•••‹•–ƒ–”‘ˆ‡••‘”ƒ––Š‡ ƒ —Ž–›‘ˆƒ™ǡŠ‹‡•‡ Vincent-Joël Proulx‹•ƒ‡‰ƒŽˆˆ‹ ‡”ƒ––Š‡ –‡”ƒ–‹‘ƒŽ‘—”–‘ˆ —•–‹ ‡ƒ† ‹˜‡”•‹–›‘ˆ ‘‰‘‰ƒ†‹•‹–‹‰ Š‘Žƒ”ƒ––Š‡ ƒ”˜ƒ”† ƒƒ””‹•–‡”ƒ†‘Ž‹ ‹–‘”‘ˆ–Š‡–ƒ”‹‘ƒ”Ǥ ‡ Š‹‰ •–‹–—–‡ǡ ƒ”˜ƒ”†‹˜‡”•‹–›Ǥ Nov 2012 378pp Hbk 9781849462853 £67 / US$134 Feb 2013 366pp Hbk 9781849463775 £65 / US$130

Published by Hart Publishing, Oxford, UK Distributors in the US: ISBS, 920 NE 58th Ave, Suite 300, Portland, OR, 97213-3786, USA Te l +1 503 287 3093 Fax +1 503 280 8832 E-mail [email protected] Website www.hartpub.co.uk / www.hartpublishingusa.com Hart Publishing Ltd. is registered in England No. 3307205 From HeinOnline

Visit us at Featuring booth #7 at ASIL IFLP is the preeminent multilinguallingual index to articles andand book reviews appearing in more than 500 legal journals published worldwide. It provides in-depth coverage of public and private international law, comparative and foreign law, and the law of all jurisdictions other than the United States, the UK, Canada, and Australia. Redeveloped and rebranded by HeinOnline in November 2011, HeinOnline's IFLP includes nearly 300,000 index records consisting of more than 265,000 articles and 31,000 book reviews across more than 500 periodicals. HeinOnline has also become a power-house for international legal materials. The collections include primary source documents, scholarly FILRD includes the publications of the American Society of International Law along with prominent Yearbooks from analysis, and finding tools not around the world, including the Hague Permanent Court of International Justice series. It also includes U.S. Law available electronically Digests, International Tribunals/Judicial Decisions and more. elsewhere.

This series presents the official documentary historical record of major U.S. foreign policy decisions and significant diplomatic activity. It is comprised of more than 500 books beginning with Lincoln’s administration in 1861 and continuing to the administration of Nixon/Ford in 1976.

Set up a free trial! Visit Hein at booth #7 to learn more.

HeinOnline, a product of William S. Hein & Co., Inc. 2350 North Forest Rd. Getzville, NY 14068 Or, contact [email protected] or Ph: 716-882-2600 • Toll Free: 800-828-7571 International: +1 716 882 2600 • Fax: 716-883-8100 800-828-7251 for more information. [email protected] • heinonline.org • www.wshein.com EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING stop by our display to see these and other new titles

Research Handbook on the Theory Environmental Protection, Research Handbook on and History of International Law 6HFXULW\DQG$UPHG&RQÀLFW International Competition Law Edited by Alexander Orakhelashvili, University of A Sustainable Development Perspective Edited by Ariel Ezrachi, University of Oxford Centre Birmingham, UK Onita Das, University of the West of England, UK for Competition Law and Policy, UK ‘The editor has done a masterful job of gathering leaders in µ>$@WLPHO\UHPLQGHURIWKHQHHGWRLQWHJUDWHVXVWDLQDEOH The 5HVHDUFK+DQGERRNRQ,QWHUQDWLRQDO&RPSHWLWLRQ WKLV¿HOGIDFLOLWDWLQJWKHÀRZRIWKLVERRNWKURXJKWKHDJHV GHYHORSPHQWLQWRNH\DUHDVRILQWHUQDWLRQDOODZLQFOXGLQJDOO /DZ brings together leading academics, practitioners and RIWKHWKLQNLQJLWGHVFULEHVDQGSUHVHQWLQJDQLQFUHGLEO\ SKDVHVRIDUPHGFRQÀLFW2QLWD'DVFOHYHUO\SLFNVKHUZD\ FRPSHWLWLRQRI¿FLDOVWRGLVFXVVWKHPRVWUHFHQWGHYHORSPHQWV ZHOOGRFXPHQWHGDQGDXWKRULWDWLYHWUHDWPHQWRIDVRPHZKDW WKURXJKWKHDSSOLFDEOHODZDQGGHULYHVVROLGVXJJHVWLRQVIRU in international competition law and policy. QHJOHFWHGVXEMHFW¶ WKHIXWXUH¶ ±$PHULFDQ6RFLHW\RI,QWHUQDWLRQDO/DZ1HZVOHWWHU 2013 616 pp Hardback 978 0 85793 479 6 $280.00 – Karen Hulme, University of Essex, UK ELGAR ORIGINAL REFERENCE 2011 560 pp Hardback 978 1 84844 354 9 $260.00 March 2013 Paperback 978 0 85793 295 2 $60.00 March 2013 288 pp Hardback 978 1 78100 467 8 $125.00 Research Handbooks in International Law series International Trade in Indigenous ELGAR ORIGINAL REFERENCE Global Environmental Governance Cultural Heritage Legal and Policy Issues International Criminal Justice Law and Regulation for the 21st Century Louis J. Kotzé, North-West University, South Africa Edited by Christoph B. Graber, Karolina Kuprecht Legitimacy and Coherence and Jessica C. Lai, University of Lucerne, µ7KLVERRNLVDQRYHOVRSKLVWLFDWHGEURDGUDQJLQJDQG Switzerland Edited by Gideon Boas, Monash University, Australia, LQVLJKWIXOVWXG\RIWKHLGHDRIJOREDOHQYLURQPHQWDOJRYHUQDQFH William A. Schabas, Middlesex University, London, EXWIURPDOHJDOGLPHQVLRQDQGSHUVSHFWLYH7KLVERRNLV µ7KLVWLPHO\DQGSLRQHHULQJYROXPHSURYLGHVDQHWKQLFDOO\ UK and Michael P. Scharf, Case Western Reserve GHVWLQHGWREHFRPHDODQGPDUNIRUOHJDODFDGHPLFVZKRZLOO VHQVLWLYHH[SORUDWLRQRIWKHLQWHUQDWLRQDOWUDGHLQLQGLJHQRXV University School of Law, US ZULWHDERXWHQYLURQPHQWDOJRYHUQDQFH¶ FXOWXUDOKHULWDJH,WLVHVVHQWLDOUHDGLQJIRUDQ\RQHLQWHUHVWHG ±$IVKLQ$NKWDUNKDYDUL*ULI¿WK/DZ6FKRRO$XVWUDOLD LQOHDUQLQJPRUHDERXWWKHSURWHFWLRQDQGGHYHORSPHQWRI µ,QWHUQDWLRQDOFULPLQDOMXVWLFHLQGHHGLVDFURZGHG¿HOG%XW LQGLJHQRXVFXOWXUDOKHULWDJH¶ WKLVHGLWHGFROOHFWLRQVWDQGVZHOODERYHWKHFURZG$QGLWGRHV 2013 360 pp Hardback 978 1 78100 252 0 $175.00 – Peter K. Yu, Drake University Law School, US VRZLWKGLJQLW\7KURXJKYLYLGGHSOR\PHQWRIXQFRQYHQWLRQDO New Horizons in Environmental and Energy Law series PHWKRGVWKLVHGLWHGFROOHFWLRQXQVHWWOHVFRQYHQWLRQDOZLVGRP 2013 544 pp Hardback 978 0 85793 830 5 $210.00 ,WWKHUHE\SXVKHVODZDQGSROLF\WRZDUGKHDUWLHUKRUL]RQV¶ – Mark A. Drumbl, Washington and Lee University, Climate Change and the Oceans School of Law, US Gauging the Legal and Policy Currents in the International Law in the Era of Climate Change Feb 2013 336 pp Hardback 978 1 78100 559 0 $135.00 $VLD3DFL¿FDQG%H\RQG Edited by Robin Warner and &OLYH6FKR¿HOG, Edited by Rosemary Rayfuse, The University of New International Law and Freshwater Australian National Centre for Ocean Resources South Wales, Australia and Lund University, Sweden and Security (ANCORS), University of Wollongong, and Shirley V. Scott, The University of New South The Multiple Challenges Australia Wales, Australia Edited by Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, &OLPDWH&KDQJHDQGWKH2FHDQV investigates the effects of µ7KLVYROXPHRIIHUVDQRULJLQDODQGWKRXJKWSURYRNLQJDQDO\VLV Christina Leb and Mara Tignino, University of climate change on the ocean environment and its implications RIWKHLPSDFWRIFOLPDWHFKDQJHDFURVVLQWHUQDWLRQDOODZ7KH Geneva, Switzerland IRUPDULWLPHDFWLYLWLHVERWKJOREDOO\DQGZLWKLQWKH$VLD3DFL¿F ERRNFRQYLQFLQJO\VKRZVKRZWKHOHJDOUHJXODWLRQRIFOLPDWH region. FKDQJHKDVDIIHFWHGWKHFRQWHQWDQGVWUXFWXUHRILQWHUQDWLRQDO µ)UHVKZDWHULVDQHVVHQWLDOUHVRXUFH7KLVERRNRIIHUVD ODZDVDZKROH$PXVWUHDGIRUHYHU\RQHLQWHUHVWHGLQFXUUHQW FRPSUHKHQVLYHLQWHUQDWLRQDOORRNDWGLYHUVHLVVXHVDULVLQJ FKDOOHQJHVWRLQWHUQDWLRQDOODZ¶ 2013 296 pp Hardback 978 1 84844 818 6 $125.00 IURPZDWHUXVHIRUKXPDQFRQVXPSWLRQDJULFXOWXUHHQHUJ\ – Wouter G. Werner, VU University Amsterdam, LQGXVWU\ZDVWHGLVSRVDODQGHFRV\VWHPFRQVHUYDWLRQ$Q The Netherlands LPSRUWDQWUHDGIRUVFKRODUVSROLF\PDNHUVDQGFRQFHUQHG FLWL]HQV¶ Climate Change 2012 400 pp Hardback 978 1 84980 030 3 $165.00 – Edith Brown Weiss, Georgetown University, US and Indigenous Peoples The Search for Legal Remedies March 2013 488 pp Hardback 978 1 78100 508 8 $210.00 Intellectual Property, Human Rights New Horizons in Environmental and Energy Law series Edited by Randall S. Abate, Florida A&M University College of Law and Elizabeth Ann Kronk, University and Competition Global Forest Governance of Kansas School of Law, US Access to Essential Innovation and Technology Legal Concepts and Policy Trends µ>7@KHPRVWFRPSUHKHQVLYHUHVRXUFHIRUDGYDQFLQJRXU XQGHUVWDQGLQJRIRQHRIWKHOHDVWFRKHUHQWO\GHYHORSHGRI Abbe E.L. Brown, University of Aberdeen, UK Rowena Maguire, Queensland University of FOLPDWHFKDQJHSROLF\UHDOPV±OHJDOSURWHFWLRQRIYXOQHUDEOH Technology, Australia LQGLJHQRXVSRSXODWLRQV:KHWKHUDVDQRYLFH¶VVWDUWLQJSRLQW µ$EEH%URZQ¶VQHZZRUNSURYLGHVDZHOFRPHDQGH[WUHPHO\ RUH[SHUW¶VGHVNWRSUHIHUHQFH,FDQQRWWKLQNRIDPRUHXVHIXO YDOXDEOHDGGLWLRQRIWKHKXPDQULJKWVGLPHQVLRQWRWKH µ>$@QLPSUHVVLYHDQGVXEVWDQWLDOFRQWULEXWLRQWRZKDWKDVVRIDU UHVRXUFHIRUDQ\RQHLQWHUHVWHGLQFOLPDWHSROLF\IRULQGLJHQRXV ORQJVWDQGLQJFRQÀLFWRYHUHVVHQWLDOWHFKQRORJLHVEHWZHHQ EHHQDUHODWLYHO\OLPLWHGOLWHUDWXUHRQKRZDQLPSRUWDQWQDWXUDO SHRSOHV¶ LQWHOOHFWXDOSURSHUW\DQGFRPSHWLWLRQODZ¶ UHVRXUFHLVPDQDJHG¶ – J.B. Ruhl, Vanderbilt University Law School, US – Steven Anderman, University of Essex, UK – Douglas Fisher, Queensland University of Technology, and University of Stockholm, Sweden Australia March 2013 616 pp Hardback 978 1 78100 179 0 $235.00 2013 272 pp Hardback 978 0 85793 496 3 $125.00 March 2013 384 pp Hardback 978 0 85793 606 6 $160.00

CONFERENCE DISCOUNTS! Edward Elgar Publishing Inc. Special pricing on display copies at the The William Pratt House, 9 Dewey Court meeting and 35% discount on pre-paid Northampton, MA 01060-3815 US orders – enter discount code ‘ASIL13’ on T: (413) 584-5551 • F: (413) 584-9933 For your free the payment page at www.e-elgar.com. catalog email: More information: [email protected] [email protected] Offer ends 5/31/13 Orders: [email protected] www.e-elgar.com Program by Track

Domestic Application of International Law

Kiobel, the ATS and Human Rights Litigation in U.S. Courts April 5 9:00-10:30 AM South Salon North, South & April 4 5:00-6:30 PM International Law in the Obama Administration: The First Four Years Central Salons Arab Spring/Revolutionary Change and International Law April 4 1:30-3:00 PM South Salon 10:45-12:15 April 5 North Salon Domestic Treatment of Universal Jurisdiction PM China and International Law April 5 2:15-3:45 PM Rooms 12, 13 & 14 The American Approach to Treaties April 6 9:00-10:30 AM North Salon

The Past and Future of April 5 9:00-10:30 AM Rooms 8 & 9 African International Law Scholarship Rethinking Private International Law: The Emergence of the “Private” April 5 3:15-4:45 PM North Salon

Bond v. United States: the Chemical Weapons Convention, Federalism and the April 4 9:45-11:15 AM South Salon Treaty Power Environment, Development, and Energy

Arctic Law: The Challenges of Governance in the Changing Arctic April 5 10:45-12:15 Rooms 12, 13 & 14 Regulating the Impacts of International Project Financing April 5 12:30-2:00 PM Central Salon Divergent Responses to Climate Change in a Multipolar World April 4 11:30-1:00 PM Central Salon Multipolar Governance Across Environmental Treaty Regimes April 6 9:00-10:30 AM Central Salon How Is The Law Of The Sea Coping With New Ocean Resources? April 4 1:30-3:00 PM Rooms 12, 13 & 14 Human Rights, International Criminal Law and the Law of Armed Confl icts

Transitional Justice Branches Out April 4 11:30-1:00 PM North Salon North, Central & April 5 5:00-6:30 PM Twenty Years of International Criminal Law: From the ICTY to the ICC and Beyond South Salons Regional Perspectives on Refugee Protection April 5 2:15-3:45 PM Rooms 8 & 9 The Inter-American Human Rights System in Crisis April 4 3:15-4:45 PM Rooms 8 & 9 The Future of Human Rights Fact Finding April 4 9:45-11:15 AM Rooms 12, 13 & 14

Remote Warfare: the Moral and Legal Challenges of Targeted Killings in a April 4 11:30-1:00 PM South Salon Multipolar World The Tension Between Law and Politics: Can the ICC Navigate a Multipolar World? April 6 9:00-10:30 AM South Salon The Regulation of Private Military and Security Contractors April 5 9:00-10:30 AM Rooms 10 & 11 New Voices Panel I April 6 9:00-10:30 AM Rooms 12, 13 & 14

Legal Responsibilities Under International Law After WMD Programs Have Been April 4 11:30-1:00 PM Rooms 8 & 9 Secured or Destroyed

Tweet about the 107th ASIL Annual Meeting using hashtag #ASILAM13 67 Raid on Bin Laden April 4 9:45-11:15 AM Rooms 10 & 11 International Dispute Resolution

Stepping Out of the Politics – Legal Solutions to Maritime Disputes in Asia April 4 9:45-11:15 AM Rooms 9 & 10

North Central & April 5 4:00-5:00 PM Inaugural Charles N. Brower Lecture on International Dispute Resolution South Salons 10:45-12:15 April 5 South Salon Unilateral Secession in a Multipolar World PM

Unquenchable Thirst: the Outlook for Energy April 4 3:15-4:45 PM Rooms 12, 13 & 14

Advancing Mediation in International Investment Disputes April 4 11:30-1:00 PM Rooms 12, 13 & 14

Uncommon Remedies in International Dispute Resolution April 4 9:45-11:15 AM North Salon

Evolution of Economic Sanctions: Where Do We Stand with Financial Sanctions? April 5 2:15-3:45 PM South Salon

International Organizations and International Governance

The Changing Role of Regional Organizations in African Peace and Security April 5 2:15-3:45 PM Central Salon

11:00-12:30 North, South & April 6 Global Governance, State Sovereignty, and the Future of International Law PM Central Salon

The EU as a Global Actor in the Multipolar World April 5 9:00 10:30 AM North Salon

The Complex History of International Law April 5 2:15-3:45 PM Rooms 10 & 11

10:45-12:15 April 5 Rooms 8 & 9 Anti-corruption Initiatives in a Multipolar World PM

An Interview of a European Scholar: Alain Pellet April 4 3:15-4:45 PM South Salon

10:45-12:15 April 5 Rooms 10 & 11 21st Century International Institutions: Lessons from Global Health Governance? PM

The 2012 UN Declaration on the Rule of Law and its Projections April 6 9:00-10:30 AM Rooms 10 & 11

Trade, Finance & Investment 10:45-12:15 China-Africa Investment Treaties and Dispute Settlement: A Piece of the April 5 Central Salon Multipolar Puzzle PM Proliferation of Regional Trade Agreements: (Re-)Shaping the Trade Landscape with April 6 9:00-10:30 AM Rooms 8 & 9 Multilateralism on Pause

Challenges and Approaches to Eff ective Cyberspace Governance in a Multi-Polar April 4 11:30-1:00 PM Rooms 10 & 11 World

G20 and Beyond- The Infl uence of Emerging Countries on the Architecture of April 5 9:00-10:30 AM Central Salon International Economic Law Alternatives to Investor-State Arbitration in a Multipolar World April 4 9:45-11:15 AM Central Salon

The Challenges for ASEAN: The South China Sea, Investment Protection and April 5 12:30-2:00 PM South Salon Myanmar

68 The Marriott Renaissance Hotel Floor Plan 2223 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20008-2864 Tel: 202.939.6000 Fax: 202.797.7133